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Jungle Australia Tour 2027

Tours25 March 2026·7 min read
Jungle Australia Tour 2027

Jungle Australia 2027 Tour Dates Confirmed

Jungle are returning to Australia in March 2027 for four arena shows across Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and Perth. The Jungle Australia 2027 dates were announced on 25 March 2026 alongside the band's fifth album, Sunshine, due 14 August 2026 via AWAL. The tour is presented by Live Nation and triple j.

This is a significant step up from their last Australian visit. In May 2024, Jungle played the Volcano album tour at mid-capacity rooms: Festival Hall in Melbourne, Fortitude Music Hall in Brisbane and Hordern Pavilion in Sydney. Those venues hold between 2,000 and 5,500 people. The 2027 run puts them in arenas seating 10,000 to 21,000. The trajectory tracks with their global growth since "Back on 74" broke through in 2023, but it also means a different kind of show; more production, higher ticket prices and fewer opportunities to stand three rows from the stage.

DateCityVenue
Tuesday 2 March 2027Brisbane, QLDBrisbane Entertainment Centre
Thursday 4 March 2027Sydney, NSWQudos Bank Arena
Saturday 6 March 2027Melbourne, VICRod Laver Arena
Wednesday 10 March 2027Perth, WARAC Arena

No support acts have been announced at the time of writing. For the 2024 Volcano tour in Australia, Mood Talk opened. Expect an update closer to the shows.

Tickets and Presale Information

Jungle tour dates 2027 tickets go on general sale at 1pm local time on Friday 27 March 2026 via Live Nation. Multiple presale windows open before that:

  • Mastercard presale: Wednesday 25 March, 12pm local time, through Friday 27 March, 12pm. Access via the Priceless website.
  • Artist presale: Thursday 26 March, 12pm local time, through Friday 27 March, 12pm. Pre-ordering the Sunshine album through Jungle's official store grants access.
  • Live Nation members presale: Thursday 26 March, 12pm local time.
  • Spotify presale: Thursday 26 March, 12pm local time.

Ticket prices have not been announced at the time of writing. For reference, the 2024 Volcano tour tickets in Australia ranged from approximately $90 to $130 for general admission. Arena pricing for 2027 will likely be higher; expect tiered seating options and a price range that reflects the venue upgrade.

Resale Policy

Jungle are using Ticketmaster's Face Value Exchange for this tour cycle. Tickets purchased through Ticketmaster can only be resold at face value on the platform. This is a deliberate move to limit scalping, and it is worth noting if you are considering secondary market purchases from other platforms. If a ticket on a third-party resale site is listed at twice face value, there is no mechanism forcing that price to be legitimate.

The Sunshine Album

The Australian leg falls roughly seven months after the release of Sunshine, Jungle's fifth studio album. Lead single "Carry On" debuted as BBC Radio 1's Hottest Record on 24 March 2026. The album is an 11-track record released via AWAL, the same distributor behind Volcano.

The full Sunshine tracklist:

  1. Come Back to Me
  2. Sunshine
  3. Where Are You Now?
  4. Move Like You Do
  5. Romeo II (feat. Bas)
  6. Carry On
  7. The Wave
  8. Someday, Somewhere
  9. Natural
  10. Reflection
  11. Heavy on My Soul

Jungle have released two standalone singles since Volcano: "Let's Go Back" in 2024 and "Keep Me Satisfied" in 2025. Both sit outside the Sunshine tracklist, suggesting the album is an entirely new body of work rather than a compilation of loosely connected singles.

Lydia Kitto, who featured prominently on the Volcano tour as a vocalist and performer, is now credited as an official member of the group alongside founders J Lloyd (Josh Lloyd-Watson) and Tom McFarland. That shift from collaborator to core member signals her increased role in the songwriting and creative direction. "Carry On" centres her vocals more prominently than most Volcano-era tracks did.

What to Expect Live

Setlist Patterns

Jungle's Volcano World Tour setlists in 2023 and 2024 ran to roughly 21 songs, drawing from all four albums at the time. The 2024 Australian shows featured nine tracks from Volcano (including "Back on 74," "Dominoes," "Candle Flame" and "I've Been in Love"), five from Loving in Stereo, four from the self-titled debut and three from For Ever.

For the Sunshine tour, expect the balance to shift. New album tracks will likely take up a significant portion of the set, but Jungle are not the kind of act that drops their back catalogue entirely. "Busy Earnin'" has been a set staple since 2014. "Back on 74" is now their most streamed song by a wide margin. "The Heat," "Beat 54 (All Good Now)" and "Heavy, California" have been consistent closers and encores across multiple tours.

A reasonable prediction: 6 to 8 Sunshine tracks, 4 to 5 from Volcano, and the remaining slots filled by career highlights. The exact ratio will depend on how the new material lands with audiences during the North American and European legs in late 2026.

Production and Stage Show

Jungle's live setup has always leaned on choreography, coordinated lighting and a full band. Their music videos are essentially short dance films, and the live show translates that visual language to the stage. The Volcano tour featured synchronised movement from the vocalists and dancers, heavy use of colour-blocked lighting and a set design that kept the focus on performance rather than screens.

Arena-scale shows will require scaling that production up. The North American leg includes venues like Barclays Center in New York and Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles; whatever production package they build for those rooms will likely carry through to Australia. Specific details on staging for the Sunshine tour have not been released.

Venue Guide

Brisbane Entertainment Centre

Located in Boondall, roughly 16 kilometres north of the CBD. Public transport options are limited; the closest train station is Boondall on the Shorncliffe line, about a 15-minute walk from the venue. Driving is the more common option, but car park congestion after shows is predictable. Rideshare pickup points can be chaotic. Plan for a slow exit regardless of your transport method.

The venue holds around 13,500 for concert configurations. Sound quality varies by section; the floor is generally the best experience for a Jungle show, where the bass response and proximity to the stage match the music. Upper-tier seats lose some of the low-end impact.

Qudos Bank Arena, Sydney

Situated at Sydney Olympic Park in Homebush. Well-served by trains to Olympic Park station, which is a short walk from the venue. Expect heavy foot traffic on the platform after the show; trains run additional services for major events, but the first 20 minutes post-show will be crowded.

Capacity is around 21,000 at full configuration. Qudos is a large room, and acts that rely on intimacy can struggle to fill it atmospherically. Jungle's visual production and high-energy performance style should translate well, but if you prefer a closer experience, floor tickets are worth the premium.

Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne

Part of the Melbourne Park precinct, adjacent to the tennis centre. Public transport is straightforward: Flinders Street station or Richmond station, then a short walk or tram. The 70 tram runs along Swan Street to the Melbourne Park stop. Post-show foot traffic along the bridge to the CBD is dense but moves steadily.

Capacity is approximately 15,000 for concerts. Rod Laver Arena has decent acoustics for a multi-purpose venue. The retractable roof may or may not be open depending on the weather in early March; Melbourne in early autumn is unpredictable. Bring a layer regardless.

RAC Arena, Perth

Located in the Perth CBD on Wellington Street, a short walk from Perth Underground station. Transport access is better than most Australian arenas purely because of the central location. Parking is available in surrounding CBD car parks, but public transport or walking is simpler for anyone staying in the city.

Capacity sits around 15,500 for concerts. The Wednesday night scheduling for Perth suggests this is a routing convenience rather than a demand-driven decision; Perth often gets weeknight shows on Australian arena tours because of the geographic distance from the east coast.

Practical Tips for Jungle Concert Australia Shows

Earplugs. Arena sound systems push significant volume, and Jungle's production is bass-heavy. Flat-attenuation earplugs (the kind that reduce volume evenly rather than muffling the sound) cost between $25 and $40 from most music retailers. They are the single best investment for anyone who attends live music regularly.

Arrive early for floor spots. If you have general admission floor tickets, the venue will fill from front to back. Jungle's visual choreography is best appreciated from a position where you can see the full stage width. Arriving early gives you options; arriving late means you are watching from behind a sea of phones.

Merch lines. Arena merch queues before the show are long. If you want a specific item, arrive early or plan to buy after the show when the lines thin. Jungle's merch tends toward clean, graphic-heavy designs; sizing runs out faster in the middle sizes.

Water. Arenas sell water at arena prices. Most venues allow you to bring in an empty water bottle and fill it inside. Hydration matters more than you think in a standing crowd, even in air-conditioned rooms.

Going with Someone Who Gets It

Jungle shows draw a specific crowd: people who care about the music, the production and the atmosphere. If your usual concert companions have never heard of Jungle, or if you are going solo and want to find someone heading to the same show, Muse connects people based on shared music taste. It is built for exactly this scenario; finding someone who will appreciate the same set as you do.

Find concert buddies on Muse

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