Every Record Kendrick Lamar Broke On The “Grand National Tour” So Far

BY Aron A. 6.3K Views
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Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 9: Kendrick Lamar performs with SZA during Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show at Caesars Superdome on February 09, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)
The Grand National tour is one of the hottest tours of the summer.

Inarguably, the biggest summer tour of the year is Kendrick Lamar and SZA’s co-headlining Grand National Tour. The duo is undoubtedly the most trusted hip-hop & R&B duo of the 2020s, who embody the purity of hip-hop and R&B’s effortless marriage. However, the tour also comes on the heels of their shared performance at the Super Bowl, which not only foreshadowed the stadium tour they’re currently embarked on but also served as another diss toward Drake

Since kicking the tour off in April 2025, virtually every stadium stop has become a milestone. Industry trackers report that each new show has eclipsed the last with sold-out crowds and eye-popping grosses. The April 19th opener in Minneapolis, for example, grossed $ 9.124 million from 47,354 fans, per Touring Data, making Lamar the first rapper ever to exceed $9 million from a single concert (surpassing Eminem’s 2019 mark of $8.7M). That debut night, which filled U.S. Bank Stadium, also set a career-high attendance for the duo. Since then, they’ve continued to crush records at every turn, and below, we’ll be breaking down each one. 

Opening Night in Minneapolis

The U.S. Bank Stadium debut was instantly historic. Touring Data reports the show grossed $9.124,989 from 47,354 sold seats – a total no hip-hop artist had ever reached. This made Lamar the first rapper in history to gross more than $9 million in one show. That figure shattered Eminem’s previous record of $8.708M (set in 2019) and underscored the massive demand for Lamar’s return to stadium stages. In fact, every ticket was sold, and the 47,000+ fan crowd marked Lamar (and SZA’s) biggest attended show to date. The April 19 launch not only set a new bar for hip-hop grosses but proved the tour’s star power right out of the gate.

Consecutive Records in Texas

Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 09: Kendrick Lamar performs onstage during Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show at Caesars Superdome on February 09, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

Just days later, Lamar and SZA topped even the Minneapolis numbers. The April 23 stop at Houston’s NRG Stadium pulled in over $9.4 million, as the pair pushed past Lamar’s freshly set record. Then on April 26 at Dallas’s AT&T Stadium, they smashed the record again – grossing $11.822 million in a single night. According to Touring Data, that Texas performance made Lamar the highest grossing Black man in history for a single live performance. In other words, the $11.822M haul overtook the previous Black male record (The Weeknd’s $9.8M in 2022). In just three shows, Lamar had set and reset the all-time rap box office record, underscoring how each successive stop kept outdoing the last.

Seattle Show Shatters All-Time Gross

Rolling Loud Miami 2022
MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA - JULY 24: Rapper Kendrick Lamar performs onstage during day three of Rolling Loud Miami 2022 at Hard Rock Stadium on July 24, 2022 in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Photo by Jason Koerner/Getty Images)

The peak came at Seattle’s Lumen Field on May 17. Industry reporting places the gross at roughly $14.811 million from 60,941 tickets – by far the largest tally in the tour’s history, which Touring Data claims makes Kendrick Lamar “the first rapper in history to take in more than $14 million for a single performance.” In doing so, he eclipsed his own Dallas mark by roughly $3M overnight. The Seattle show’s attendance (60,941) was also the tour’s highest to date. (Touring Data notes this is the largest crowd ever to see Lamar or SZA perform.) Together, the Seattle figures shattered every benchmark: it now stands as the highest-grossing hip-hop concert in history, and the first time any rap show exceeded $14M.

For SZA, the Seattle numbers also represent a personal milestone. The $14.811M gross is so far her biggest co-headline night, and by Touring Data’s measure, it is “the highest-grossing concert by a female artist who debuted in the 2010s” (crediting SZA’s role). 

Tour Milestones & Industry Firsts

By late May, the Grand National Tour’s string of landmarks extended well beyond individual shows. Estimates reported the tour had already grossed $112.5 million after its first 10 shows. That total surpassed Lamar’s previous career best (his 2023 Big Steppers Tour at $110.8M) and made him “the only rapper to have multiple tours in the top 5 [highest-grossing hip-hop tours of all time].” In other words, Lamar now holds two of the five biggest rap tour grossing totals ever. Pundits are even projecting that if current trends hold, the Grand National Tour will end as the highest-grossing rap tour in history.

SZA’s Historic Contributions

Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 09: SZA performs in the Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show at Caesars Superdome on February 9, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images)

Although Kendrick Lamar is the marquee name, co-headliner SZA has also chalked up tour-related records. By sharing top billing, SZA helped set those massive box office figures – making her a record-holder in her own right. For example, the Lumen Field gross ($14.811M) is the largest ever for any female headliner of her era, per reports. The Seattle crowd was SZA’s personal best as well. In addition, SZA’s career metrics have soared: she is now one of only a handful of Black female artists to headline tours surpassing $100M. (She joins an elite club that includes Beyoncé and Tina Turner.) In short, SZA’s presence on the Grand National Tour has produced unprecedented milestones for a female artist in hip-hop.

Together, Lamar and SZA have turned the Grand National Tour into a commercial juggernaut. Each stop has rewritten the record books – from the first stadium gross over $9M, to the first over $14M – and in doing so has set new standards for the live music industry. With dozens of dates still to come, the tour’s record-breaking pace shows no signs of letting up.

About The Author
Aron A. is a features editor for HotNewHipHop. Beginning his tenure at HotNewHipHop in July 2017, he has comprehensively documented the biggest stories in the culture over the past few years. Throughout his time, Aron’s helped introduce a number of buzzing up-and-coming artists to our audience, identifying regional trends and highlighting hip-hop from across the globe. As a Canadian-based music journalist, he has also made a concerted effort to put spotlights on artists hailing from North of the border as part of Rise & Grind, the weekly interview series that he created and launched in 2021. Aron also broke a number of stories through his extensive interviews with beloved figures in the culture. These include industry vets (Quality Control co-founder Kevin "Coach K" Lee, Wayno Clark), definitive producers (DJ Paul, Hit-Boy, Zaytoven), cultural disruptors (Soulja Boy), lyrical heavyweights (Pusha T, Styles P, Danny Brown), cultural pioneers (Dapper Dan, Big Daddy Kane), and the next generation of stars (Lil Durk, Latto, Fivio Foreign, Denzel Curry). Aron also penned cover stories with the likes of Rick Ross, Central Cee, Moneybagg Yo, Vince Staples, and Bobby Shmurda.