Demi Lovato wrapped the It’s Not That Deep Tour this week with final shows in Houston and Austin, Texas. The singer made clear this run meant something special to her.
Closing out in her home state was the right ending. Lovato said so in her own words. On Instagram, she described the experience as “the most fun I’ve ever had on tour in my whole life.” For someone with a career stretching back nearly two decades, that’s a meaningful statement. She’s covered a lot of ground, from her Disney Channel start to her pop and rock chapters.
The post drew more than 80,000 likes, but what stood out most was how personal the message got. Demi talked about reading fan-made posters from the stage, laughing with crowds, and “reminiscing on all of our eras” together with her Lovatics. It reads less like a tour wrap-up and more like a love letter.
The Lovatics have been with Demi through a lot. Her fanbase is one of the more devoted in pop music. That history clearly colored every night on this tour. Reading posters and revisiting old eras with her crowd is that kind of connection. It can’t be replicated.
Opening act Adela Jergova was with the tour from start to finish. Lovato gave her a warm shout-out. She wrote that Jergova deserved “the world” for “getting the party started every night.” That acknowledgment says a lot about the atmosphere Demi built on this run.
Lovato thanked her dancers, crew, and full team. Then she addressed her fans directly. “Thank u all for everything, my lovatics,” she wrote. She also slipped in a small wordplay moment her fanbase is already running with: “You can’t spell ‘vocalist’ without ‘lovatics’!”
The It’s Not That Deep Tour takes its name from Lovato’s most recent album. That record leaned into a looser, more playful version of the artist. It let go of some of the heavier themes from earlier chapters. The live shows matched that energy. Demi described the joy of “dancing and singing together” with audiences as something that felt genuinely unmatched.
Texas carries real meaning for Lovato. She was born in Albuquerque, New Mexico, but grew up in the Dallas area. Closing a tour on home turf hits differently. These crowds have followed her through her Disney days, her pop peak, and her rock pivot.
Lovatics at both shows filled the comments with memories and warm messages. The response felt like a proper send-off.
Lovato closed the post with “it’s not that deep tour forever and ever and ever” and a string of pink hearts. The tour may be named after not overthinking things. But this one clearly left a mark.
