There’s a moment every year when winter finally lets go, and suddenly, everything feels possible again. The days get longer, the energy shifts, and your group chats start filling up with plans.
Which means one thing: spring is here!
There’s a lot to look forward to each spring, and this year it’s shaping up to be one of the strongest concert seasons Canada has seen in years.
This guide covers the best spring concerts happening in Toronto, Montréal, and Vancouver, plus exactly where to park for each one. Use the parking links throughout, or book ahead with Indigo Neo so you’re not left circling and searching.
Here are the hottest concerts coming this spring.
JUMP TO:
Spring Concerts in Toronto
The Neighbourhood

April 6 | 7:30 PM | Scotiabank Arena
The Neighbourhood opens Toronto’s spring concert season with The World Tour, their most ambitious run yet, a headline arena tour supporting a discography that’s grown well beyond the indie alt-rock band they started as. Their setlist will span the full catalogue, from the breakthrough days of Sweater Weather and Afraid through to their more recent, moodier work.
WHERE TO PARK:

CIBC Square: 81 Bay Street
2-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 366 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site.
Raye

April 13 | 8:00 PM | Coca-Cola Coliseum
RAYE arrives in Toronto fresh off an extraordinary run: six BRIT Award nominations in a single year, a debut album she released independently and a growing reputation as one of the best live performers in British pop. Her live shows are celebrated for their intimacy, which sounds strange for an arena-adjacent artist, but every account of her performances makes the same point: she connects with the crowd on a level that makes the venue feel small.
WHERE TO PARK:

99 Atlantic Avenue
10-minute walk to the venue
This surface lot is open 24/7 and has 35 spaces available. Payment is only available on-site.
Florence + The Machine

April 16 | 7:30 PM | Scotiabank Arena
Florence Welch brings the Everybody Scream Tour to Scotiabank Arena, and if you’ve never seen Florence + the Machine live, this is the show that will make you regret every year you didn’t go. The set draws from across the catalogue: Dog Days Are Over, You’ve Got the Love, Shake It Out, Ship to Wreck, and the newer material from Dance Fever and beyond.
WHERE TO PARK:

325 Bay Street
9-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 200 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site.
Demi Lovato Live in Toronto

April 20 | Scotiabank Arena
Powerhouse vocals and a production that earns the arena setting. Demi Lovato’s live show mixes catalogue classics with newer releases, and the stage design tends to be striking. If you’ve followed their career through any of its chapters, the setlist will hit differently in person.
WHERE TO PARK:

Roserock Place: 121 King St. W.
10-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 182 spaces available.
Lewis Capaldi at Scotiabank Arena

April 23 | Scotiabank Arena
Half the arena will be in tears by the second song. Capaldi is as good live as he is on record; his stage presence is disarmingly casual, all self-deprecating humour between gut-punch ballads. Fans sing every word back at him, making the whole venue feel much smaller than it is. Bring tissues. Seriously.
WHERE TO PARK:

26 Wellington Street East
9-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 128 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site.
Dave- The Boy Who Played the Harp

April 13 | 8:00 PM | Coca-Cola Coliseum
The British rapper Dave comes to Toronto on the North American leg of his first headline tour in almost four years, supporting The Boy Who Played the Harp. This album debuted at number one in the UK and continued a run that’s made him the first British rapper to debut three consecutive albums at the top of the charts. The album itself is built around Dave’s role as a producer and writer first, nine of the ten tracks produced or co-produced by him, with collaborators including James Blake, Tems, and Kano. Live, he’s known for interacting with crowds and creating a show that feels genuinely different from a typical hip-hop arena night.
WHERE TO PARK:

99 Atlantic Avenue
10-minute walk to the venue
This surface lot is open 24/7 and has 35 spaces available. Payment is only available on-site.
Summer Walker at Scotiabank Arena

May 26 | Scotiabank Arena
Summer Walker brings her smooth, atmospheric R&B to Scotiabank Arena, with rising artist Odeal opening. Her live shows are known for feeling more intimate than the venue suggests; the crowd tends to know every word, and she plays to that. A good night for anyone who’s had her music on repeat.
WHERE TO PARK:

Brookfield Place: 181 Bay Street
4-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 1450 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site.
A$AP Rocky – Don’t Be Dumb World Tour

May 31| Scotiabank Arena
A$AP Rocky at Scotiabank Arena, high-production arena rap with fashion-forward visuals and a setlist that spans his full discography. His shows tend to move fast, mixing crowd favourites with new material from Don’t Be Dumb. This one will go quickly; don’t sit on tickets.
WHERE TO PARK:

First Canadian Place: 109 Adelaide Street West
2-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 1036 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site.
Spring Concerts in Montréal
Lady Gaga- The Mayhem Ball

April 2, 3 & 6, 2026 | 8:00 PM | Centre Bell
Three nights. Lady Gaga gives Montréal three nights of the Mayhem Ball, the tour that has been the dominant live spectacle of the past year, a show built around her sixth studio album, Mayhem and supported by production that reviewers have consistently described as among the most ambitious she’s ever mounted.
The setlist across the tour has run to nearly 30 songs, including Abracadabra, Zombieboy, Bad Romance, Poker Face, Shallow, Alejandro, and newer material from Mayhem. She’s a 14-time Grammy, Oscar, and Emmy winner, and her live shows have always been calibrated to justify that list of achievements — theatrical, physically demanding, and vocally uncompromising.
WHERE TO PARK:

1350 Boulevard René-Lévesque Ouest
4-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 501 spaces available. Located a few minutes from the Bell Centre, with access to the Metro and Rem Station.
Goo Goo Dolls

April 8| Place Bell- Laval
A little nostalgia, a lot of sing-alongs. The Goo Goo Dolls still draw a crowd that knows every word, especially when Iris hits. Their shows lean into that early-2000s alt-rock feeling, familiar, loud, and just emotional enough to catch you off guard.
WHERE TO PARK:

Place Bell: 1950 Rue Claude-Gagné
1-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is the on-site lot for the arena, is open 24/7 and has 500 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site. Payment is only available on-site.
RAYE

April 12 | 8:00 PM | Place Bell, Laval
If you’ve had Escapism on repeat, this one’s non-negotiable. RAYE’s live performances bring a rawness that doesn’t always come through on streaming. Expect powerful vocals, a strong stage presence, and a crowd that’s fully locked in from start to finish.
WHERE TO PARK:

Place Bell: 1950 Rue Claude-Gagné
1-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is the on-site lot for the arena, is open 24/7 and has 500 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site. Payment is only available on-site.
Florence + The Machine

April 15 | Bell Centre
This is the kind of show that feels bigger than the venue. Florence Welch doesn’t just perform, she commands the room. Big vocals, cinematic production, and a setlist that builds into something almost spiritual by the end. Even if you’re a casual listener, it lands.
WHERE TO PARK:

Hôtel Novotel: 1180 Rue de la Montagne
5-minute walk to the venue
This underground lot is open 24/7 and has 100 spaces available. Payment is only available on-site.
Lewis Capaldi

April 21 | Bell Centre
Half the crowd will be laughing, the other half wiping tears, usually at the same time. Capaldi’s mix of humour and heartbreak is what makes his shows stand out. He keeps things light between songs, then hits you with a ballad that silences the entire room.
WHERE TO PARK:

Place Bonaventure: 800 Rue Mansfield
10-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is open 24/7 and has 761 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site.
Khalid

May 26 | 7:00 PM | Place Bell, Laval
Khalid’s first major tour in six years — that’s the context for this date, and it’s significant. He’s returning with Lauv as a guest on every stop of the 25-date North American run, and the two of them together cover a serious amount of emotional ground in modern pop and R&B. Khalid described the return on Instagram: ten years of a career that’s brought him the most incredible memories, and now finally back on the road.
WHERE TO PARK:

Place Bell: 1950 Rue Claude-Gagné
1-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is the on-site lot for the arena, is open 24/7 and has 500 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site. Payment is only available on-site.
Spring Concerts in Vancouver
Diljit Dosanjh

April 23, 2026 | 8:00 PM | BC Place
Diljit Dosanjh opens the North American leg of his Aura World Tour in Vancouver — the same city where his Dil-Luminati Tour drew 48,800 people to BC Place in 2024, making him the first Indian pop star to sell out the entire stadium. He’s back at the same venue, with a new tour and a new album, and the expectation is that this show will match or surpass that night.
Dosanjh is one of India’s biggest entertainers; actor, singer, and songwriter with 13 studio albums and a career that has crossed over from Punjabi pop into global streaming success.
WHERE TO PARK:

651 Expo Boulevard
1-minute walk to the venue
This underground garage is the on-site lot for the arena, is open 24/7 and has 168 spaces available.
An Evening with PinkPantheress

April 16, 2026 | 8:00 PM | PNE Forum
PinkPantheress is a two-time Grammy nominee who has built one of the most distinctive sounds in contemporary pop through a blend of alt-pop, drum and bass, UK garage, and bedroom production that draws on 90s and early 2000s nostalgia without feeling retro. Her rise happened fast: viral TikTok hits gave way to a debut album, a Coachella headline slot, and a North American arena-scale tour within a few years of her first release.
WHERE TO PARK:

Sunrise Building: 2750 East Hastings Street
7-minute walk to the venue
This underground lot is open from 7am-10pm and has 50 spaces available.
Disclosure

April 18, 2026 | 6:30 PM | PNE Forum
Two nights after PinkPantheress, the PNE Forum hosts Disclosure, brothers Guy and Howard Lawrence, the English electronic duo whose 2013 debut Settle (featuring Sam Smith on Latch) established them as one of the most important acts in house and garage music of the past decade. Their live show is not a DJ set in the conventional sense: they incorporate real drums, bass guitar, live instrumentation, and a horn section alongside their production, building a set that has genuine physical momentum.
WHERE TO PARK:

Sunrise Building: 2750 East Hastings Street
7-minute walk to the venue
This underground lot is open from 7am-10pm and has 50 spaces available.
Lewis Capaldi

May 6 | Rogers Arena
Lewis Capaldi also plays Vancouver as part of the same tour run that hits Toronto and Montréal this spring. The show is the same in the best sense — the songs, the comedy between sets, the singalong moments — but the venue and crowd make each night its own thing.
WHERE TO PARK:

Rogers Arena – East Lot: 80 Expo Boulevard
1-minute walk to the venue
This surface lot is the on-site lot for the arena, is open 24/7 and has 281 spaces available.
The Black Keys

May 31 | Rogers Arena
The Black Keys return to Vancouver for the first time since 2022, and for many fans, the first chance to hear anything from the band’s last three albums live. Their catalogue runs from Delta Kream and Brothers through to the newer material, and their live performances consistently deliver what the recordings promise.
WHERE TO PARK:

401 West Georgia Street
11-minute walk to the venue
This underground lot is open from 6am-11pm and has 235 spaces available. EV charging is available on-site.
Conclusion
Spring across Canada just hits different. The cities come back to life, calendars fill up fast, and suddenly there’s something worth heading out for every weekend, and most weekdays too.
Parking fills fast around Scotiabank Arena, Coca-Cola Coliseum, Centre Bell, and Rogers Arena on event nights.
Use Indigo Neo to find and book parking near your event, or click the parking links throughout this guide to skip the circling and get straight to enjoying your night.



