Noah Kahan announced four consecutive nights at Fenway Park in Boston, a booking that marks one of the biggest venue commitments of his career.
The Vermont singer-songwriter shared the news on Instagram, writing directly to the venue: “Fenway Park, I’m coming home. Can’t wait to spend 4 nights with you.” The post pulled nearly 100,000 likes.
The “coming home” framing makes sense. Kahan grew up in Strafford, Vermont, roughly 200 miles from Boston. New England has long been central to his identity and his music. He broke through with the 2022 album “Stick Season,” a record rooted in Vermont life. The title track eventually crossed a billion streams on Spotify. A deluxe version, “Stick Season (We’ll All Be Here Forever),” followed in 2023. By 2024 and into 2025, Kahan was selling out mid-size arenas across North America and Europe.
Fenway Park holds about 37,000 seats for baseball. Concert configurations push that number higher. Four nights there would put total attendance somewhere around 160,000 people. That places Kahan firmly among stadium-level headliners.
Four consecutive nights at the same venue in the same city signals something specific. It means demand is concentrated and loyal enough to fill those seats multiple times. That kind of repeat-market strength is usually associated with acts like Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran, or Bruce Springsteen. Their audiences routinely book multiple shows in the same run.
Kahan joins a group of artists who’ve headlined multiple nights at Fenway. The park has hosted concerts since the 1970s. Names from The Rolling Stones to Harry Styles have taken the outfield stage. A four-night stand puts Kahan in notable company at that address.
The announcement went up with no ticket link and no specific dates. No opening act has been named either. Fans in the comments are already asking about on-sale timing. Kahan’s shows have sold out quickly in recent tour cycles, so presale demand will likely be heavy.
His New England connection gives these shows an added layer. Kahan has spoken in interviews about feeling rooted in the region. “Stick Season” captured the particular loneliness of a Vermont autumn. That feeling resonated far outside the state’s borders. Fenway carries its own deep New England symbolism. The setting feels right for this point in his career.
No broader tour has been announced alongside the Fenway dates. For now, Boston is the headline. Four nights at one of the most recognized venues in North America is a clear measure of his career trajectory.
