Biffy Clyro announce huge summer 2026 London Finsbury Park gig with Nothing But Thieves, Don Broco, and more

Biffy Clyro have announced a huge gig at London’s Finsbury Park next summer, with support from Nothing But Thieves, Don Broco, and more. Check out the details and ticket information below.
The gig will take place on Friday July 3 2026, and with a capacity of 45,000, it will be a landmark moment for the band, who are set to play their biggest headline show to date.
It comes in celebration of Simon Neil and co. recently sharing their new album ‘Futique’ to both huge praise from critics and fans alike. Joining them at the one-off outdoor show will be Nothing But Thieves, who will return to the stage following the completion of their ‘Welcome to the DCC’ world tour, as well as Don Broco, Marmozets and Wavves.
“Finsbury fuckin’ Park – see you in July,” the band said in a new statement. “This is going to be so special, don’t miss it…”
Tickets go on sale on Friday (November 28) at 10am, and presale options will be available from Wednesday (November 26) at 10am. Visit here for tickets.
Biffy Clyro Finsbury Park gig poster, 2026. CREDIT: Press
The new Finsbury Park gig will also come following Biffy Clyro playing a huge tour celebrating ‘Futique’ at the start of the new year. Playing arenas around the UK and Ireland, those dates kick off on January 9 in Belfast, and continue with stops in Dublin, Nottingham, London and more throughout the month.
Joining them on that run of shows will be special guests Soft Play and The Armed.
Biffy’s latest album was given a glowing four-star review from NME when it dropped, and described as “one of their most personal and definitive records to date”.
“There’s a vulnerability met with a forward motion; a feeling of three friends shining light through the cracks to find a renewed sense of purpose,” it read. “You can holler ‘Mon the Biff!’ for a while longer, it seems. A little love and a lot of noise goes a long way.”
Back in September, the Scottish rockers spoke to NME about their latest album, and Neil described it as “arms-wide-open, defenceless, for better or worse, here it is.”
Telling NME about the song ‘Goodbye’, he said it was almost like a “goodbye to a version of myself I’m trying to leave behind.”
“That’s not how I want the song to be read, but that was my initial instinct: the ‘too much of never enough’ shit,” he added. “It’s really hard for me to find the balance between going at 100mph and being completely static.”
As well as the huge UK shows lined-up, Biffy Clyro also have a run of intimate US tour dates set to kick off in December. Visit here for US tickets.




