The Jonas Brothers are taking their fan experience JonasCon on the road with them for 10 stops of their upcoming U.S. tour the band confirmed Tuesday.
JonasCon initially took place on March 23 and celebrated the trio’s two-decade career with live performances, DJ sets, Q&A panels, pop-up surprises, and special guest appearances. They held the event at American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey — one of the largest malls in the country — which the band said was a nod to their early mall performances. Jonas Brothers-themed events took place around New York City and at American Dream over the weekend.
Following the inaugural JonasCon, the trio announced their Jonas20: Living the Dream North American tour, calling the upcoming shows a “powerful, full-circle celebration of their 20-year journey from performing in malls to headlining the biggest stadiums in the world.” The JonasCon on Tour popups will happen at the band’s New Jersey, D.C., Philadelphia, Hershey, Toronto, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Dallas, and Los Angeles shows.
The fan experience will be free for all ticket holders, who will be able to attend an “interactive tailgate party,” per the announcement. It will feature Camp Rock and Jonas Brothers karaoke, art installations, photo ops, trivia challenges and a trading post that fans can submit to sell Jonas Brothers creations.
Ticket presale for the tour open on March 27 at 10 a.m. local time. The tour will officially kick off on August 10 at MetLife Stadium.
As Joe, Nick and Kevin Jonas celebrate the band’s 20th anniversary this year, 2025 looks to be keeping them busy. Nick Jonas is starring in the broadway production The Last Five Years alongside Adrienne Warren, while Joe Jonas’s upcoming solo album Music For People Who Believe In Love will release in May. The band released a letter to their Instagram last month expressing their feelings about the achievement, while highlighting a “year of music” from group records, solo music, a live album and a soundtrack. The band’s got a holiday film on the way as well later this year.
“To us, it feels like just yesterday we were loading up our family mini-van with a couple of guitars and copies of It’s About Time CDs, en route to an afternoon performance at a local mall to play for anyone who would listen,” the group wrote in their post. “Here’s to the next 20 years, and here’s to doing it together.”