Every concert in New York City,
one calendar.
Madison Square Garden to the back room of a Lower East Side club, tracked across all five boroughs and sorted the way New Yorkers actually get there, by train.
Marquee rooms
Madison Square Garden
The room every touring artist wants to headline, and a residency here still means you've made it.
123ACBrooklynBarclays Center
A genuine arena in the heart of Brooklyn, and one of the best-connected venues in the city.
BDNQRManhattanBeacon Theatre
The sweet spot between club and arena, ornate, intimate, and acoustically loved by artists.
123QueensForest Hills Stadium
History and open sky, a leafy stadium in a landmark neighborhood, unlike any other NYC show.
EFMRLIRRBrooklynBrooklyn Paramount
One of the city's great restoration stories, a Wonder-era palace hidden in plain sight for 60 years.
BQR23BrooklynKings Theatre
An opulent 3,000-seat palace off the beaten path, walking in for the first time is a gasp moment.
QBManhattanBowery Ballroom
Impeccable sound, a great balcony, and sightlines that make 575 people feel intimate and huge at once.
JZBDFBrooklynBrooklyn Steel
Raw industrial space with big sound, the go-to for buzzy indie acts too big for the ballrooms.
LGManhattanThe Rooftop at Pier 17
Maybe the most scenic summer show in the city, sunset over the East River, bridge lit up behind the band.
2345AManhattanRadio City Music Hall
Possibly the most beautiful room in America, the interior alone is worth the ticket.
BDFMNManhattanWebster Hall
A century of downtown history in the walls, from Tammany balls to punk to today's headliners.
LNQR4ManhattanApollo Theater
You are literally standing where Ella, James Brown, and Aretha made history, sacred ground.
ABCD1How it works
We track the venues, not the middlemen. Every room gets its own page with the schedule, the nearest subway lines, capacity, and honest insider notes on where to stand and how to get there. Filter by borough, scan the full calendar, or find your room on the map.