Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

End Game: A look back at Taylor Swift's Eras Tour as it arrives in Vancouver

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Dec, 2024 11:21 AM
  • End Game: A look back at Taylor Swift's Eras Tour as it arrives in Vancouver

After a year of anticipation, Taylor Swift's Eras Tour lands in Vancouver on Friday, with the first of three shows at BC Place. Sunday's performance will be the last show of the entire tour.

Here are some facts about Swift's record-breaking tour.

A Place in This World 

The Eras Tour began almost 21 months ago, on March 17, 2023, in Glendale, Ariz., and has covered 19 countries on five continents over a 149-show schedule that included North American cities as well as London, Tokyo, Singapore and Sydney. 

Would've, Could've, Should've

The number of total countries visited and concert dates would have been even higher, but three shows scheduled in Vienna, Austria, in August were cancelled after police foiled an alleged terrorist plot.

Everything Has Changed 

According to music industry publication Pollstar, The Eras Tour is the first ever to break the billion-dollar mark after bringing in US$1.04 billion in revenue up to Nov. 15, 2023. The publication says about 4.35 million tickets were sold for the first 60 dates on the tour, and Swift will likely gross more than US$2 billion after the Vancouver shows are finished.

If This Was a Movie 

Swift's success has not been limited to concerts. The movie, "Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour" became the highest-grossing concert documentary film in history, taking in more than US$261 million at the box office worldwide — about US$180 million from North America alone.

Long Story Short 

The records extend into the literary market, where Swift's "Eras Tour Book" sold about 814,000 copies over the U.S. Thanksgiving weekend, all exclusively through retailer Target. It was the biggest publishing launch of 2024 so far.

Shake It Off 

Swift's concerts have also been compared in scale to natural phenomena, with seismologists in the U.S. Pacific Northwest detecting signals equal to a 2.3-magnitude earthquake for a July 2023 concert that drew more than 70,000 fans to Seattle's Lumen Field.

The Last Time 

At the Eras Tour's only other Canadian stop in Toronto last month, tourism industry estimates put the six-concert slate's anticipated economic impact at $282 million. That includes $152 million of direct spending during the 10 days the tour was in the city.

You Need to Calm Down

Telecom giant Rogers Communications says Toronto concert goers shattered the single-event data usage record for Rogers Centre where the shows were held. The company says fans at the Nov. 21 show used 7.4 terabytes of mobile data — the equivalent of the storage capacity of about 10,000 CDs.

End Game 

Vancouver tourism officials say the final three shows of The Eras Tour will generate an estimated $157 million in economic impact for the city, including $97 million in direct spending on accommodations, food, retail and transportation. More than 70 per cent of that will be coming from visitors outside of the city, translating into more than $27 million in tax revenue.

Is It Over Now? 

Swifties at the shows this weekend might break BC Place's attendance record of 65,061, set in September 2023 by singer Ed Sheeran. Before that, the attendance record was held by U2, who drew 63,802 fans in 2009.

MORE National ARTICLES

Parliament remains gridlocked amid Trump trade talk and postal strike

Parliament remains gridlocked amid Trump trade talk and postal strike
Parliament closes in on its eighth week of gridlock over a privilege motion, as Canada Post employees are on strike and calls emerge to exclude Mexico from upcoming trade talks. While question period has continued, other house business is on hold due to a Conservative privilege motion calling on the government to turn over unredacted documents on a green technology fund.

Parliament remains gridlocked amid Trump trade talk and postal strike

Police say death of young woman found in Halifax Walmart walk-in oven not suspicious

Police say death of young woman found in Halifax Walmart walk-in oven not suspicious
The death of a young Halifax woman whose body was recently found in a Walmart's walk-in oven was not suspicious and did not involve foul play, police said Monday. The death of the 19-year-old employee in the store's bakery was reported on Oct. 19.

Police say death of young woman found in Halifax Walmart walk-in oven not suspicious

Avian flu detected in additional Abbotsford and Chilliwack flocks: CFIA

Avian flu detected in additional Abbotsford and Chilliwack flocks: CFIA
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says it has detected the presence of highly pathogenic avian influenza in commercial poultry at additional locations in two British Columbia cities. The agency says the flu has been detected at two more premises in Abbotsford and Chilliwack, both of which have seen multiple cases since October. 

Avian flu detected in additional Abbotsford and Chilliwack flocks: CFIA

Stabbing assault in Surrey

Stabbing assault in Surrey
Mounties in Surrey say they are looking for the public’s help to identify a suspect who reportedly stabbed two youths last week.  Police say they responded to reports of the stabbing in the afternoon of November 14th in the city’s Newton neighbourhood, finding two injured youths. 

Stabbing assault in Surrey

Vancouver Island doctors set up overdose prevention sites without government blessing

Vancouver Island doctors set up overdose prevention sites without government blessing
Doctors on Vancouver Island say they're setting up unsanctioned overdose prevention sites on the grounds of Nanaimo General and Royal Jubilee hospitals this week because the B.C. government hasn't lived up to its promise to set aside space for the sites. Dr. Jess Wilder, an addictions and family medicine practitioner in Nanaimo, says her work has been mired in "controversy and politicization" lately, and setting up overdose prevention sites is "about saving lives." 

Vancouver Island doctors set up overdose prevention sites without government blessing

Trial begins for men accused in migrants' deaths near Manitoba border crossing

Trial begins for men accused in migrants' deaths near Manitoba border crossing
Jury selection is underway in the trial of two men accused of smuggling migrants across the Canada-U. S. border. Harshkumar Ramanlal Patel and Steve Shand are accused of being part of operation that brought people from India to Canada, then across the border from Manitoba to Minnesota.

Trial begins for men accused in migrants' deaths near Manitoba border crossing