Tate McRae's Miss Possessive Tour: $110.8 Million Triumph
written by a member of the WCB
The numbers don’t lie, and for Tate McRae, they tell a story of unprecedented growth that’s reshaping the pop music scene. Her Miss Possessive Tour has just wrapped up, and the results are nothing short of astronomical.
Let’s talk raw data. McRae grossed a staggering $110.8 million across 77 shows, selling over a million tickets. This isn’t just a tour; it’s a statement. Compare this to her previous tour, and we’re looking at a quintupled earnings performance that defies conventional industry expectations.
The trajectory is mind-blowing. In 2022, McRae was averaging 1,084 tickets per show in clubs. Fast forward to 2025, and she’s commanding sold-out arenas with an average of 13,480 tickets. That’s a growth of over 5,300% in just three years.
Her per-show earnings tell an equally impressive story. From $26,600 in 2022 to $1.4 million in 2025, McRae has consistently doubled her earnings year after year. The Miss Possessive Tour marks her first venture into the nine-figure gross territory, with a tour that’s tripled her previous total attendance.
Geographically, McRae dominated. Europe saw $27.9 million and 359,000 tickets, while North America exploded with $82.7 million and 673,000 tickets. Her New York progression is particularly telling – from a single 1,200-capacity show in 2022 to three Madison Square Garden performances totaling 41,503 tickets in 2025.
What sets McRae apart isn’t just the numbers, but the relentless pace. While contemporaries like Billie Eilish and Dua Lipa take breathers between tours, McRae has fired off three tours in three years, with no more than six months between them.
With a No. 1 Billboard 200 album, a Hot 100 hit alongside Morgan Wallen, and her first Grammy nomination, McRae isn’t just growing – she’s rewriting the playbook for emerging pop stars.
The Miss Possessive Tour isn’t just a tour. It’s a declaration of arrival.