TWICE is bringing its biggest world tour yet back home. After nearly a year of stadiums, arenas, sold-out shows, and record-breaking crowds, the group will close its ‘THIS IS FOR’ tour with a three-day finale in Seoul.
JYP Entertainment announced on June 1 that TWICE will hold encore concerts for its sixth world tour, ‘THIS IS FOR,’ from July 10 to 12 at KSPO DOME in Olympic Park, Songpa-gu, Seoul.
The Seoul shows will mark the final stop of a global tour that began in July 2025 at Incheon Inspire Arena, where all seats were sold out. Over the past year, TWICE has traveled across Asia, Oceania, North America, and Europe, turning ‘THIS IS FOR’ into the group’s largest tour to date.
By the time the tour ends, TWICE will have performed 81 shows in 44 cities, setting a new personal record for the group.

TWICE’s Biggest Tour Comes Back to Korea
The Seoul finale carries special meaning because the tour began in Korea and will now end there.
For ONCE, the encore concerts are not just additional dates. They are the closing chapter of a year-long journey that connected TWICE with fans around the world. The decision to hold three final shows at KSPO DOME also reflects the group’s strong domestic fanbase, even as its touring power continues to grow globally.
TWICE Sets a New K-Pop Girl Group Record in North America
One of the most impressive parts of the ‘THIS IS FOR’ tour was its North American leg.
From January to April, TWICE performed 35 shows in 20 North American cities, including Austin and several major tour markets. The group attracted around 550,000 fans, becoming the K-pop girl group with the largest audience total in North America. That achievement shows how far TWICE’s live reach has expanded. The group is no longer only a top-tier K-pop act with strong album sales and streaming numbers. It is now one of the most powerful touring girl groups in the global music market.
Japan Shows TWICE’s Stadium-Level Power
TWICE also made history in Japan.
The group became the first foreign artist to hold solo concerts at Japan National Stadium in Tokyo, drawing a total of 240,000 fans over three days. That milestone was part of an even larger Japanese tour run. When combined with shows at Kyocera Dome Osaka, Vantelin Dome Nagoya, PayPay Dome Fukuoka, and Tokyo Dome, TWICE drew a massive 640,000 fans in Japan alone.
For a single tour in one country, that number underlines TWICE’s exceptional popularity and long-term strength in the Japanese market.

Landmark Stadiums Across Asia Added to the Scale
Beyond Korea, North America, Europe, and Japan, TWICE also performed at major landmark venues across Asia.
The group took the stage at venues such as Malaysia National Hockey Stadium, Kaohsiung National Stadium, and Kai Tak Stadium, further proving its ability to fill large-scale spaces across different regions.
These stops helped position ‘THIS IS FOR’ as more than a standard world tour. It became a showcase of TWICE’s touring power across major Asian music markets.
Europe Tour Nears Its Final Stop
TWICE is currently completing the European leg of the tour.
The group has performed in Lisbon, Barcelona, Paris, Turin, Berlin, Cologne, and Amsterdam, covering nine shows in seven cities.
TWICE will wrap up the European schedule with concerts at The O2 Arena in London on June 3 and 4 local time. After that, the members will begin preparing for the final Seoul encore shows in July.
Why TWICE’s Seoul Finale Matters
Since debuting in 2015, TWICE has built one of K-pop’s most recognizable catalogs with hits such as ‘TT,’ ‘Cheer Up,’ ‘FANCY,’ and ‘LIKEY.’
Nearly a decade later, the group is still expanding its reach. The scale of ‘THIS IS FOR’ shows that TWICE has moved from hitmaker status to stadium-level touring power. The Seoul encore concerts will close a tour that broke the group’s own records and strengthened its place among K-pop’s biggest global acts.
For fans, it will be a final chance to celebrate the tour where it began: in Korea.
For TWICE, it will be the closing moment of a world tour that proved the group’s global story is still growing.

