Ye (formerly Kanye West) is set to perform in a U.S. stadium for the first time since 2021’s Free Larry Hoover benefit show.
West will be returning to the stage on April 3 with a concert at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif. Pre-sale tickets are set to go on sale starting on Tuesday (March 10) at 10 a.m. local time on Ticketmaster, while the general public gets their chance on Wednesday (March 11).
SoFi Stadium’s website has added the date to its calendar and billed the homecoming show as “Ye Live in Los Angeles” and West’s “Only Show in Los Angeles.”
A Yeezy tour page promoting the concert has also surfaced with a pre-save to West’s upcoming album, Bully, which is slated to arrive later in March via Gamma.
West is coming off a pair of sold-out shows in Mexico City in January. He’s also slated to perform in Italy in July. It’s unclear if the L.A. date is a one-off show or a sign of more to come in North America.
In the past, the Chicago native had expressed his frustrations with being unable to book shows in the U.S. following his string of antisemitic remarks, which began back in 2022, and resulted in Kanye losing partnerships with Adidas, Gap, Universal Music Group, CAA and Balenciaga.
Ye has since taken steps to mend fences with the Jewish community. After meeting with a Rabbi in 2025, Yeezy took out a full-page ad in the Wall Street Journal in January, penning an apology letter to the Jewish and Black communities he’s offended with his inflammatory commentary and actions in recent years.
“I regret and am deeply mortified by my actions in that state, and am committed to accountability, treatment and meaningful change,” he wrote at the time. “It does not excuse what I did, though. I am not a Nazi or an antisemite. I love Jewish people.”
The Anti-Defamation League said at the time that Ye’s apology was overdue. “Ye’s apology to the Jewish people is long overdue and doesn’t automatically undo his long history of antisemitism — the antisemitic ‘Heil Hitler’ song he created, the hundreds of tweets, the swastikas and myriad Holocaust references — and all of the feelings of hurt and betrayal it caused,” an ADL spokesman told Billboard in January. “The truest apology would be for him to not engage in antisemitic behavior in the future. We wish him well on the road to recovery.”
West hasn’t hit the road in the U.S. for a proper trek since 2016’s Saint Pablo Tour, which was canceled during its second leg after Ye was hospitalized in November 2016 due to extreme exhaustion and dehydration.
Ye’s last SoFi Stadium appearance came during Rolling Loud 2024, which was more in the line of the “listening experiences” West had been hosting with Ty Dolla $ign in support of their Vultures collab album, rather than a traditional concert.








