The Eagles just pushed their Las Vegas Sphere run even deeper into 2026, adding six more shows and reinforcing their hold on one of live entertainment’s most closely watched residencies.

The band announced Monday that “Eagles: Live in Concert at Sphere” will return for additional performances on September 18, September 19, November 13, November 14, November 27 and November 28. The new dates extend a multi-year engagement that reports indicate has already become the longest-running residency at the venue, a milestone that speaks to both sustained demand and the Sphere’s growing pull as a destination stage.

The added dates do more than lengthen a schedule — they signal that the Sphere’s biggest bet on legacy acts still has room to grow.

That matters because the Sphere has become more than another Las Vegas room. It has emerged as a test of whether blockbuster technology, premium ticketing and catalog-driven live shows can keep audiences coming back over multiple seasons. The Eagles’ expansion suggests the answer remains yes, especially for an act with a deep songbook and a fan base willing to travel for a spectacle built around sound, scale and familiarity.

Key Facts

  • The Eagles added six new Sphere shows for fall 2026.
  • The new dates are September 18, September 19, November 13, November 14, November 27 and November 28.
  • “Eagles: Live in Concert at Sphere” is now the venue’s longest-running residency.
  • The extension continues the band’s multi-year Las Vegas run.

The timing also stands out. By stacking dates in September and again around mid- and late November, the residency stretches across key travel windows when Las Vegas typically benefits from event-driven traffic. Sources suggest that kind of scheduling can help a residency function not just as a concert series, but as a recurring tourism engine for the Strip, where major shows compete for attention with sports, conventions and headline attractions.

What happens next matters beyond one band or one venue. Every extension at the Sphere adds another data point in the live industry’s search for durable, high-end concert models. If the Eagles continue to draw, expect more scrutiny on how long established acts can thrive in immersive venues — and how Las Vegas keeps reshaping itself as a home for prestige residencies, not just one-off spectacles.