Dominate World Tour
2024–2025 concert tour by Stray Kids
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Dominate World Tour (stylized as Stray Kids World Tour <dominATE>) was the third world tour and fourth overall concert tour by South Korean boy band Stray Kids in support of their ninth Korean-language extended play Ate (2024), second Japanese-language studio album Giant (2024), first mixtape Hop (2024), single album Mixtape: Dominate (2025), and fourth Japanese-language EP Hollow (2025). The original tour began in Seoul, South Korea, on August 24, 2024, and concluded in Rome, Italy, on July 30, 2025. They traveled in Asia, Australia, Latin America, North America, and Europe.
- Asia
- Australia
- Latin America
- North America
- Europe
| World tour by Stray Kids | |
![]() Seoul promotional poster | |
| Location |
|
|---|---|
| Associated albums | Ate Giant Hop Mixtape: Dominate Hollow Karma |
| Start date | August 24, 2024 |
| End date | October 19, 2025 |
| Duration | c. 180 minutes |
| Legs | 7 |
| No. of shows | 56 |
| Website | straykidsworldtour |
| Stray Kids concert chronology | |
The encore edition of the Dominate World Tour to support Stray Kids' Korean-language fourth studio album Karma, titled Dominate: Celebrate (stylized as dominATE: celebrATE) was held in Incheon on October 18 and 19, 2025. The concert film, titled Stray Kids: The Dominate Experience, filmed at SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, premiered on February 6, 2026.
Background and promotion
Stray Kids uploaded the video "Step Out 2024" to their social media on January 1, 2024, outlining their accomplishments in 2023 and plans for the next year, including a world tour.[1] In May, during Stray Kids and American fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger interview at the 2024 Met Gala, Hilfiger accidentally revealed that the group would go on a 40-city tour.[2] Later, they confirmed the tour during an appearance at Good Morning America a few days later.[3]
The world tour, titled Dominate, was formally announced on July 8, alongside the first Asia and Australia leg shows from August 2024 to January 2025, as well as teasing the upcoming shows in Latin America, North America, and Europe.[4] According to JYP Entertainment, the tour title "Dominate" referred to "Stray Kids' unique ambition and determination as 'global top artists' who will dominate the stage."[5] On November 19, the group added the addition 20 tour dates across Latin America, North America, and Europe from March to July 2025.[6] The show at Rogers Stadium in Toronto marked the group the first ever act to perform at the venue.[7] Due to overwhelming demand, additional show dates for New York, Los Angeles, and Mexico City were added on November 23,[8][9] and London, Paris, Santiago, and São Paulo four days later.[10][11]
Stray Kids uploaded the video "Step Out 2025" to their social media on January 6, 2025. It outlined their accomplishments in 2024 and plans for the upcoming year, revealing that the group would hold its encore concert in Seoul in 2025.[12] On January 30, Stray Kids announced additional dates for Arlington and Madrid (the latter being subsequently cancelled),[13] and added two new stops, which are four dates for Shizuoka, Japan and one date for Rome, Italy.[14] On September 5, Stray Kids announced the encore concert, subtitled Celebrate, set to hold on October 18 and 19 at Incheon Asiad Main Stadium, Incheon.[15]
To commemorate the Dominate World Tour, Stray Kids and nonprofit organization Musicians on Call lighted the Empire State Building to celebrate the healing power of music.[16] The band also collaborated with Tottenham Hotspur Football Club for limited-edition jersey.[17]
Concert synopsis

The Dominate show is around three hours long,[18] beginning with Stray Kids, wearing beige and white glittering outfits inspired by Greek and Roman draping, performing "Mountains", "Thunderous", and "Jjam".[19] Following the group welcoming to the concerts, it is continued by "District 9", and "Back Door", which the latter utilizes rollable doors on the stage.[18] It is followed by four members premiering each of their then-unreleased tracks: Han's "Hold My Hand", Lee Know's "Youth", Seungmin's "As We Are", and Hyunjin's "So Good".[19]
In the second act, the group arrives to the stage in a black classic car to perform "Chk Chk Boom", "Topline", "Super Bowl", "Comflex", "Lalalala", "Twilight", "Lonely St.", and the Korean version of "Social Path".[18] The show continues by the other four members' solos: Bang Chan's "Railway", I.N's "Hallucination", Felix's "Unfair", and Changbin's "Ultra".[19] The final act includes "Get Lit", "Item", "Domino", "God's Menu", "S-Class", "Venom", and concludes with "Maniac".[20] Stray Kids end the concert with an encore from "I Like It", "Case 143", "My Pace", "Stray Kids", "Miroh", the Festival version of "Chk Chk Boom", "Star Lost", and "Haven".[21]
Starting in Latin American leg, Stray Kids revamped the setlist in March 2025, including some songs such as "Giant" (Korean version), "Walkin on Water", and sub-unit tracks—Changbin and I.N's "Burnin' Tires", Han and Felix's "Truman", Bang Chan and Hyunjin's "Escape", and Lee Know and Seungmin's "Cinema"—replacing individual performances, etc.[22]
Critical reception
Hwang Hye-jin from Newsen praised the members in the Dominate tour for proving their excellent stage management skills by diligently moving around the center stage, the raised stage, and even the two sides, based on the experience they gained through the Japanese dome and North American stadium performances during their second tour.[21] Writing for The Straits Times, Joanne Soh called the Singapore show the "commanding presence, high energy and elaborate numbers that were heavy on theatrics,"[23] and Ashley Cheah from HallyuSG noted the camera works, live band, members' solo stages, and performance details as the four highlights of the show.[24]
Commercial performance
Researcher Lee Hyun-ji from Eugene Investment & Securities predicted that the Dominate World Tour would attract 1.7 million people for the original 41 shows, which is an average of 40,000 people per show.[25] In February 2025, it was estimated that the tour will attract 2.2 million people worldwide for the total shows, the largest amount for a single concert tour by a South Korean artist.[26]
With the Dominate World Tour, Stray Kids became the first South Korean act to perform in several venues: Estádio do Morumbi, São Paulo; T-Mobile Park, Seattle; Camping World Stadium, Orlando; Nationals Park, Washington, D.C.; Wrigley Field, Chicago; Globe Life Field, Arlington; Rogers Stadium, Toronto (also the first overall artist);[27] Johan Cruijff Arena, Amsterdam; Deutsche Bank Park, Frankfurt; Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, London; Riyadh Air Metropolitano, Madrid; and Stadio Olimpico, Rome. The tour was also the largest concert by a solo South Korean artist and the first by an Asian act in the Netherlands, Germany, and Spain.[28] According to Billboard, the tour was the biggest ever concert tour in Latin America, North America, and Europe, sold 1.3 million tickets and grossed $185.9 million in 2025, including two shows in Hong Kong.[29] Pollstar ranked Stray Kids number two on the "Top 20 Global Concert Tours", the highest K-pop artist.[30][31]
Media
Stray Kids: The Dominate Experience
A concert film of the Dominate World Tour, titled Stray Kids: The Dominate Experience, was released on February 6, 2026, by Crosswalk in North America and UPCG internationally.[32] With a runtime of 145 minutes,[33] it features the footage of the Dominate World Tour at SoFi Stadium, Inglewood. The film was directed by Paul Dugdale and produced by Live Nation Studios, while Farah X directed the documentary segments.[34] Live Nation reported that the film's ticket sales in the United States sold $1.4 million on the first day of ticket selling.[35] As of February 8, 2026[update], it has grossed $5.7 million at the North American box office and $20 million worldwide,[36] and would rank first at the box office on its opening day.[37]
Other media
A virtual concert, titled Lynkpop: Stray Kids World Tour <Dominate Japan> VR is set to premiere from March 6 to June 21, 2026, at Seibu Shibuya in Tokyo. It was filmed at Shizuoka Stadium ECOPA.[38]
Setlist
Main set[39]
- "Mountains"
- "Thunderous" (GDA version)
- "Jjam"
- "District 9"
- "Back Door"
- "Hold My Hand" (Han solo)
- "Youth" (Lee Know solo)
- "As We Are" (Seungmin solo)
- "So Good" (Hyunjin solo)
- "Chk Chk Boom"
- "Topline"
- "Super Bowl"
- "Comflex"
- "Lalalala"
- "Twilight"
- "Lonely St."
- "Social Path" (Korean version)
- "Railway" (Bang Chan solo)
- "Hallucination" (I.N solo)
- "Unfair" (Felix solo)
- "Ultra" (Changbin solo)
- "Get Lit"
- "Item"
- "Domino"
- "God's Menu"
- "S-Class" (VMA version)
- "Venom" (MAMA version)
- "Maniac" (MAMA version)
- Encore
- "I Like It"
- "Case 143"
- "My Pace"
- "Stray Kids"
- "Miroh"
- "Chk Chk Boom" (Festival version)
Notes
- Starting in Seoul on August 25, 2024, Stray Kids additionally performed a song after "Chk Chk Boom" (Festival version):
- "Haven": Seoul (day 2–4; the day 4 sang after "Star Lost"), Singapore, Melbourne,[40] Kaohsiung,[41] Tokyo (day 1), Macau (day 1),[42][43] and Hong Kong (day 2)
- "Star Lost": Seoul (day 4), Sydney,[44] Tokyo (day 2),[43] and Bangkok[45]
- "Fam": Tokyo (day 3) and Osaka (day 2)
- "Megaverse": Bocaue,[46] Macau (day 2),[42] and Hong Kong (day 1)
- "Circus": Osaka (day 1)
- "Christmas Love": Osaka (day 3)[47]
- "Freeze": Jakarta[48]
- At the Tokyo and Osaka shows, Stray Kids performed the Japanese versions of "Super Bowl", "Social Path", "Case 143", and "My Pace"; and added "Giant" between "Lalalala" and "Twilight".[49][47]
- At the Bangkok show, Stray Kids debuted a part of "Walkin on Water" performance unofficially.[50]
Main set[51]
- "Mountains"
- "Thunderous" (GDA version)
- "Jjam"
- "District 9"
- "Back Door"
- Dancers' medley ("Hellevator", "Easy", "S-Class", "Walkin on Water", "Charmer", "Venom", "Hall of Fame")
- "Chk Chk Boom"
- "Domino"
- "God's Menu"
- "Truman" (Han and Felix)
- "Burnin' Tires" (Changbin and I.N)
- "Escape" (Bang Chan and Hyunjin)
- "Cinema" (Lee Know and Seungmin)
- "Giant" (Korean version)
- "Walkin on Water"
- "S-Class" (VMA version)
- "Lonely St."
- "I Am You"
- "Cover Me"
- "Topline"
- "Social Path" (Korean version)
- "Lalalala"
- "Megaverse"
- "Maniac" (MAMA version)
- Encore
- "I Like It"
- "Blind Spot"
- "Stray Kids"
- "Miroh"
- "Chk Chk Boom" (Festival version)
Notes
- Songs performed after "Chk Chk Boom" (Festival version):
- "Haven": Santiago (day 1), São Paulo (day 1), Seattle,[52] Cumberland,[53] New York (day 2), Chicago,[54] London (day 2), Paris (day 2), and Rome[55]
- "Get Lit": Santiago (day 2; before "Chk Chk Boom" (Festival version)), Arlington (day 1), and London (day 1)[56]
- "Ta": Rio de Janeiro
- "My Pace": São Paulo (day 2; before "Chk Chk Boom" (Festival version))
- "God's Menu": Lima (swapped from main set to encore due to issues with security after performing "Domino")
- "Hall of Fame": Mexico City (day 1), Fukuroi (day 3), Inglewood (day 2),[57] New York (day 1), and Amsterdam[58]
- "Star Lost": Mexico City (day 2), San Francisco,[59] Orlando, Toronto, Madrid, and Rome[55]
- "Case 143" (Japanese version): Fukuroi (day 1)
- "Circus": Fukuroi (day 2)
- "Fam": Fukuroi (day 4)[60]
- "Item": Inglewood (day 1), and Frankfurt[61]
- "Freeze": Arlington (day 2), and Paris (day 1)
- At the Fukuroi shows, Stray Kids performed the Japanese version of "Giant" and "Social Path" and added "Hollow" between "S-Class" and "Lonely St."[62]
- Starting at Fukuroi shows, "I Am You" was removed from the setlist and "Super Board" and "My Pace" were added surround "I Like It".[63]
- At the Washington, D.C. show, Stray Kids did not perform encore due to heat wave causing attendees suffering heat-related illnesses.[64][65]
Main set
- "Mountains"
- "Thunderous" (GDA version)
- "Jjam"
- "District 9"
- "Back Door"
- "Bleep"
- "Domino"
- "Chk Chk Boom"
- "Truman" (Han and Felix)
- "Burnin' Tires" (Changbin and I.N)
- "Escape" (Bang Chan and Hyunjin)
- "Cinema" (Lee Know and Seungmin)
- "Walkin on Water"
- "God's Menu"
- "S-Class" (VMA version)
- "Ceremony"
- "Half Time"
- "Lonely St."
- "Cover Me"
- "In My Head"
- "Topline"
- "Social Path" (Korean version)
- "Lalalala" (Rock version)
- "Megaverse"
- "Maniac" (MAMA version)
- Encore
- "Super Board"
- "I Like It"
- "My Pace"
- "Blind Spot"
- "Stray Kids"
- "Miroh"
- "Chk Chk Boom" (Festival version)
- "Ceremony" (Festival version)
Notes
- On the second day, "Star Lost" and "Haven" replaced "Ceremony" (Festival version).
Tour dates
| Date (2024) | City | Country | Venue | Attendance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| August 24 | Seoul | South Korea | KSPO Dome | — |
| August 25 | ||||
| August 31 | ||||
| September 1[A] | ||||
| September 28 | Singapore | National Stadium | 30,000[23] | |
| October 19 | Melbourne | Australia | Marvel Stadium | — |
| October 26 | Sydney | Allianz Stadium | — | |
| November 3[B] | Kaohsiung | Taiwan | Kaohsiung National Stadium | 40,000[70] |
| November 14 | Tokyo | Japan | Tokyo Dome | 165,000[71] |
| November 16 | ||||
| November 17[C] | ||||
| November 23 | Bocaue[D] | Philippines | Philippine Arena | 55,000[73] |
| November 29 | Macau | China | Galaxy Arena | — |
| November 30 | ||||
| December 5[C] | Osaka | Japan | Kyocera Dome | 150,000[74] |
| December 7 | ||||
| December 8[C][A] | ||||
| December 14 | Bangkok | Thailand | Suphachalasai Stadium | 20,000[75] |
| December 21 | Jakarta | Indonesia | Indonesia Arena[E] | — |
| Date (2025) | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 18 | Hong Kong | China | AsiaWorld–Arena | — | — |
| January 19 | |||||
| March 27 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Bicentenario de La Florida | 65,000[77] | $41,100,000[29] |
| March 28 | |||||
| April 1 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Estádio Nilton Santos | 55,000[78] | |
| April 5 | São Paulo | Estádio MorumBIS | 120,000[79] | ||
| April 6 | |||||
| April 9 | Lima | Peru | Estadio San Marcos | 45,000[80] | |
| April 12 | Mexico City | Mexico | Estadio GNP Seguros | 115,000[77] | |
| April 13 | |||||
| May 10 | Fukuroi[F] | Japan | Shizuoka Stadium ECOPA | 220,000[81] | — |
| May 11 | |||||
| May 17[G] | |||||
| May 18 | |||||
| May 24 | Seattle | United States | T-Mobile Park | 491,000[29] | $76,200,000[29] |
| May 28 | San Francisco | Oracle Park | |||
| May 31 | Inglewood[H] | SoFi Stadium | |||
| June 1 | |||||
| June 6 | Arlington | Globe Life Field | |||
| June 7 | |||||
| June 10 | Cumberland[I] | Truist Park | |||
| June 14 | Orlando | Camping World Stadium | |||
| June 18 | New York City | Citi Field | |||
| June 19 | |||||
| June 23 | Washington, D.C. | Nationals Park | |||
| June 26 | Chicago | Wrigley Field | |||
| June 29 | Toronto | Canada | Rogers Stadium | ||
| July 11 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Johan Cruijff Arena | 50,000[83] | $64,500,000[29] |
| July 15 | Frankfurt | Germany | Deutsche Bank Park | 45,000[84] | |
| July 18 | London | England | Tottenham Hotspur Stadium | 90,000[56] | |
| July 19 | |||||
| July 22 | Madrid | Spain | Riyadh Air Metropolitano | 60,000[85] | |
| July 26 | Saint-Denis[J] | France | Stade de France | 120,000[86] | |
| July 27 | |||||
| July 30 | Rome | Italy | Stadio Olimpico | 70,000[87] | |
| October 18[K] | Incheon | South Korea | Incheon Asiad Main Stadium | 60,000[88] | — |
| October 19[K][A] | |||||
| Total | 1,300,000 (31/56) shows (2025)[89] | US$185,700,000 (2025)[89] | |||
Cancelled shows
| Date (2025) | City | Country | Venue | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| July 23 | Madrid | Spain | Riyadh Air Metropolitano | Unforeseen circumstances[13] |
Personnel
Notes
- Streamed simultaneously on Beyond Live.[66][67][68]
- Postponed from November 2, 2024, due to Typhoon Kong-rey.[69]
- Upgraded from Madya Stadium.[76]
- Streamed simultaneously on Abema, Stagecrowd, Hulu Japan, and U-Next.[82]
- Labelled as Los Angeles in promotional material.
- Billed as Dominate: Celebrate
