Hamilton Tour 2026: Cast, Cities & Where to Sit
Hamilton has been touring North America since 2017, bringing the Founding Fathers-themed smash to cities across the country. Seeing it on tour is a different experience from a permanent Broadway run, and the venue you're sitting in matters more than most people realize. This post covers everything you need to plan your night: the current cast, how to choose the best seat for the space, where the tour is headed, and more. Find your Hamilton tickets now at Event Tickets Center.
Why Seating Matters More in a Touring Show
Hamilton travels to venues of vastly different sizes and configurations. The set uses two concentric turntables, which means sight lines matter in a way they simply don't for a show with a static stage.
How Touring Theaters Differ from Broadway
Broadway houses were purpose-built for theater, but touring venues are far more variable: some are excellent, some require more deliberate seat selection. The Hamilton Angelica Tour travels in 14 truckloads of cargo and reconstructs the full set at every stop, including the turntable rig. The production stays faithful to the original, but the surrounding room changes every few weeks. Two things to consider when choosing seats: rake and acoustics. A steep rake gives upper sections a clean view of the full stage; a shallow rake can make the orchestra feel flat. Center sections typically deliver the most balanced sound across all tiers.
The Hamilton Touring Company
View the current Hamilton touring cast:
- Tyler Fauntleroy, Alexander Hamilton
- Jimmie "J.J." Jeter, Aaron Burr
- Lily Soto, Eliza Hamilton
- Amanda Simone Lee, Angelica Schuyler
- Nadina Hassan, Peggy Schuyler / Maria Reynolds
- A.D. Weaver, George Washington
- Christian Magby, Marquis de Lafayette / Thomas Jefferson
- Eddie Ortega, Hercules Mulligan / James Madison
- Nathan Haydel, John Laurens / Philip Hamilton
- Matt Bittner, King George III
Best Seats Section by Section
No single seat is best for every venue on the Hamilton tour. The guidance below gives you a framework for choosing based on your priorities.
Orchestra vs. Mezzanine vs. Balcony
The orchestra puts you closest to the action, but rows A through E can be too close to take in the turntable as a whole. Rows F through M in the center orchestra are the sweet spot: close enough to read faces, far enough to see the full stage picture. The mezzanine is often the best value in a touring house. A slight elevation gives you a clean view of the entire stage, and the center mezzanine front rows consistently sell out first.
The balcony works better in venues with a steep rake. Sound carries well in most Hamilton touring stops, but the distance from the performers is a real trade-off in a show that relies this heavily on facial expression and physical storytelling.
The Side Sections
Side orchestra sections are typically priced lower than center orchestra sections, but the trade-offs are worth considering. Because the Hamilton set is built around a central turntable, extreme side angles can cut off portions of the stage during key scenes. Side mezzanine is generally a safer bet: the added height compensates for the angle and opens up more of the stage. In either case, avoid the first one or two rows on either side in larger venues, as that proximity makes the angle more limiting. Section names can vary by venue, so use this as a general framework rather than a strict rule.
Hamilton 2026 Tour Stops
The Angelica Company is in the middle of a long routing that runs through the end of 2026 and well into 2027, covering major markets across the US and Canada. Engagements range from one week to nearly two months, and additional cities are expected to be announced.
View all 2026 Hamilton tour stops:
- Detroit, MI, Fisher Theatre (through May 17, 2026)
- Durham, NC, DPAC (May 20, June 14, 2026)
- Nashville, TN, Tennessee Performing Arts Center (June 17, June 28, 2026)
- Louisville, KY, Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts (June 30, July 12, 2026)
- Fort Worth, TX, Bass Performance Hall (July 14, July 26, 2026)
- San Antonio, TX, Majestic Theatre (July 28, August 9, 2026)
- Oklahoma City, OK, Civic Center Music Hall (August 11, August 23, 2026)
- Little Rock, AR, Robinson Center (August 25, September 1, 2026)
- Atlanta, GA, The Fox Theatre (September 2, September 20, 2026)
- Birmingham, AL, BJCC Concert Hall (September 22, September 27, 2026)
- Orlando, FL, Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts (September 29, October 18, 2026)
- Tampa, FL, Straz Center for the Performing Arts (October 21, November 8, 2026)
- Ft. Lauderdale, FL, Broward Center for the Performing Arts (November 10, November 22, 2026)
- Naples, FL, Artis-Naples (November 24, November 29, 2026)
- Jacksonville, FL, Jacksonville Center for the Performing Arts (December 1, December 13, 2026)
- Washington, DC, The National Theatre (December 15, 2026, February 7, 2027)
- Richmond, VA, Altria Theater (February 23, March 7, 2027)
- Baltimore, MD, The Hippodrome Theatre (March 9, March 28, 2027)
- Dayton, OH, Schuster Theatre (March 30, April 11, 2027)
- Lincoln, NE, Lied Center for Performing Arts (April 13, April 18, 2027)
- Minneapolis, MN, Orpheum Theatre (April 20, May 16, 2027)
- Vancouver, BC, Queen Elizabeth Theatre (May 26, June 13, 2027)
- Calgary, AB, Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium (June 15, June 27, 2027)
- Edmonton, AB, Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium (June 29, July 4, 2027)
- San Jose, CA, San Jose Center for the Performing Arts (July 7, July 18, 2027)
- Reno, NV, Pioneer Center for the Performing Arts (July 20, July 25, 2027)
- Los Angeles, CA, Hollywood Pantages Theatre (July 28, August 29, 2027)
- Albuquerque, NM, Popejoy Hall (August 31, September 12, 2027)
Hamilton Setlist
Hamilton is sung almost entirely through. There is very little spoken dialogue: every plot development, argument, and emotional turn happens in song. The score blends hip-hop, R&B, jazz, and classic Broadway, all written by Lin-Manuel Miranda. If you want a few songs to listen to before you go, start with the modern classics: "My Shot," "Wait for It," "You'll Be Back," and "The Room Where It Happens."
Act I
View Act I songs:
- Alexander Hamilton
- Aaron Burr, Sir
- My Shot
- The Schuyler Sisters
- Farmer Refuted
- You'll Be Back
- Right Hand Man
- A Winter's Ball
- Helpless
- Satisfied
- The Story of Tonight
- Wait for It
- Stay Alive
- Ten Duel Commandments
- That Would Be Enough
- Guns and Ships
- History Has Its Eyes on You
- Yorktown (The World Turned Upside Down)
- What Comes Next?
- Dear Theodosia
- Non-Stop
Act II
View Act II songs:
- What'd I Miss?
- Cabinet Battle #1
- Take a Break
- The Room Where It Happens
- Schuyler Defeated
- I Know Him
- The Adams Administration
- We Know
- Hurricane
- The Reynolds Pamphlet
- Burn
- Blow Us All Away
- Stay Alive (Reprise)
- It's Quiet Uptown
- The Election of 1800
- Your Obedient Servant
- Best of Wives and Best of Women
- The World Was Wide Enough
- Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story
When to Arrive
Give yourself more time than you think you need. Touring productions often have longer security and load-in processes than permanent Broadway theaters, so aim to arrive 30 to 45 minutes before curtain. The show runs about two hours and 45 minutes with one intermission; latecomers are not seated until a suitable break, and the opening number starts fast. Factor all of that into your parking and transportation plans.
Merchandise lines tend to be long before the show. Buy early or wait for intermission. As King George III will not-so-kindly inform you before the show starts, photography and recording are strictly prohibited during the performance.
Tickets You Can Trust
Hamilton on tour is one of the most in-demand shows in live theater, and Event Tickets Center has tickets available for every stop on the routing. Every purchase is backed by the 100% Buyer Guarantee, so you can buy with full confidence regardless of when you decide to go. Find your nearest tour stop and be in the room where it happens!