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Guns N' Roses: World Tour 2026 at Snapdragon Stadium, Wednesday, September 2

Paul Stritmatter·Aug 2, 2026·5 min.

Guns N' Roses return to Snapdragon Stadium on September 2 with The Black Crowes — a stadium-sized night of hard-rock classics.

Overview

Welcome to the jungle — the most dangerous band in rock history is coming back to San Diego. Guns N' Roses bring their World Tour 2026 to Snapdragon Stadium on Wednesday, September 2, with The Black Crowes supporting. Three years after their sold-out 2023 show at the same venue, Axl, Slash, Duff, and company return for a stadium-sized night of the songs that defined hard rock — "Welcome to the Jungle," "Sweet Child O' Mine," "Paradise City," "November Rain," and the rest. If you've been waiting to check this one off the bucket list, this is your shot.

What You Actually Need to Know

  • Artists: Guns N' Roses, with The Black Crowes
  • Date: Wednesday, September 2, 2026
  • Time: Event time 6:25 PM (it's a long night — GN'R are known for ~3-hour sets)
  • Where: Snapdragon Stadium — 2101 Stadium Way, San Diego (SDSU campus)
  • Price: Varies widely by section; check current pricing
  • Tickets: Available via Ticketmaster, Live Nation, and AXS

About the Band

Few bands have a legend like this one. Formed in Los Angeles in 1985, Guns N' Roses became one of the best-selling rock acts of all time — over 100 million records sold — and their 1987 debut, Appetite for Destruction, remains the best-selling debut album in U.S. history. Their reputation for chaos earned them the "most dangerous band in the world" tag, and their nine-minute "November Rain" video was one of the most expensive ever made. The reunion of core members Axl Rose, Slash, and Duff McKagan turned their touring years into some of the highest-grossing in history, and they remain a genuine must-see live act.

What to Expect

A Guns N' Roses stadium show is an event — routinely three hours and 25-plus songs deep. You'll get the Appetite classics, the Use Your Illusion epics, a few well-chosen covers, and Slash's guitar heroics stretched out across the night, plus newer material like "Nothin'" and "Atlas." It's loud, theatrical, and built for a stadium. The Black Crowes — Southern-rock hitmakers behind "Hard to Handle" and "She Talks to Angels" — open the night and are a strong draw in their own right, so it's worth getting in early.

Getting There

Snapdragon Stadium sits on the SDSU campus, and the smartest move is the Green Line Trolley — it stops at the Stadium Station right outside the gates, which beats fighting the post-show parking exodus. If you drive, you'll want a parking pass and some patience getting out afterward. Rideshare has designated drop-off and pickup zones as well.

Good to Know

  • It's an open-air stadium show — bring a layer, since San Diego evenings cool down after dark
  • Take the Trolley if you can; 35,000 people leaving at once makes parking slow
  • Arrive early — there's an opener, security, and a big venue to navigate
  • Buy through official sellers (Ticketmaster, Live Nation, AXS) to avoid inflated resale
  • Plan for a late night — with a three-hour headline set, this one runs long

It's one of the marquee concerts to close out the San Diego summer. Planning more live music? See our guide to the best San Diego summer concerts, or browse the full event calendar.