Gwen Stefani Leads No Doubt Into 18 Sphere Shows in Vegas
gwen stefani and No Doubt will stage an 18-concert Las Vegas Sphere residency from May 6 through June 13. The run makes No Doubt the first act fronted by a woman to headline the venue, and it gives last-minute buyers a narrow pricing window that starts at $124 including fees.
Sphere run for No Doubt
The residency spans more than five weeks in Las Vegas, with the Anaheim natives scheduled to perform at the Sphere in 2026. That schedule matters because No Doubt’s last full concert before the residency was at Coachella in 2024, where the band played both weekends. After that gap, this is not a nostalgia lap on the cheap; it is a return built around a venue that can sell a premium experience night after night.
Tony Kanal said the show will be different because it is done in acts and will have more intimate moments and more over the top moments that really like take people on a journey on what this venue can do. That structure points to a production designed for the Sphere’s scale, not a straight greatest-hits set that could be moved to any arena.
Ticket prices from $124
The cheapest ticket found for any one No Doubt Sphere show was $124 including fees on SeatGeek, while other shows started anywhere from $129 to $218 including fees. For a residency built on a limited calendar, that spread gives buyers an immediate choice: go in on the lowest entry price or pay up for a different night in the same run.
Gwen Stefani said in December that she wants the audience to feel the show as a return to earlier years. “I want people to come and make it feel, like, really nostalgic,” she told Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show. “Like they’re back in time. Like, ‘remember this? Remember this, guys?’ Like, this is what we did together.’”
Stefani’s nostalgia pitch
That framing fits a band returning after its 2024 Coachella appearances and doing it in a venue that has become a test case for how legacy acts can package scale, memory and ticket demand at once. No Doubt is not selling just a reunion; it is selling a specific kind of restart, with acts, venue design and set pacing all tied to that promise.
For readers deciding whether to jump in now, the practical takeaway is simple: the entry price is already visible, and the run is limited to 18 shows between May 6 and June 13. If the point is to catch No Doubt in a format built around nostalgia and spectacle, this residency is the lane.