
A Cubs-Twins day game at Wrigley Field followed by Rush at the United Center. A Crosstown Classic weekend anchored by Bruno Mars at Soldier Field. Yankees-Cubs and Lollapalooza in the same weekend.
That’s the key to planning Chicago in 2026: the best weekends aren’t about forcing impossible same-night pairings. They’re about finding the right overlap between Cubs and White Sox homestands and the city’s biggest concerts and festivals. With Wrigley Field, Rate Field, Soldier Field, the United Center and Grant Park all active during MLB season, there are a handful of weekends where you can realistically build a two- or three-event trip with manageable logistics.
Here are the best ones.
Not every busy weekend is worth building a trip around. These are the Chicago weekends where the matchups are strong, the concert calendar delivers and the timing actually works in your favor.
The spring Crosstown Classic at Rate Field paired with a Soldier Field stadium show gives Chicago one of its strongest early-season weekends.
MLB games
The Cubs and White Sox meet on the South Side for a rivalry series that always brings extra heat, no matter where either team sits in the standings.
Friday, May 15: Cubs at White Sox, 6:40 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Saturday, May 16: Cubs at White Sox, 6:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Sunday, May 17: Cubs at White Sox, 1:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Concerts
Bruno Mars brings The Romantic Tour to Soldier Field for a two-night Chicago run.
Saturday, May 16: Bruno Mars at Soldier Field
Sunday, May 17: Bruno Mars at Soldier Field
Ideal itinerary
This is best as a multi-day weekend, not a same-day doubleheader.
Friday: Crosstown Classic opener at Rate Field
Saturday: Bruno Mars at Soldier Field
Sunday: Crosstown finale at Rate Field
This weekend pairs a Dodgers series on the South Side with a major Wrigley concert, giving Chicago one of its more compelling June sports-and-music overlaps.
MLB games
The White Sox host the Dodgers for an interleague series that gives Chicago fans one of the biggest non-rivalry matchups of the summer.
Friday, June 12: Dodgers at White Sox, 6:40 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Saturday, June 13: Dodgers at White Sox, 3:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Sunday, June 14: Dodgers at White Sox, 1:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Concerts
That same weekend, RÜFÜS DU SOL takes over Wrigley Field on Friday night.
Friday, June 12: RÜFÜS DU SOL at Wrigley Field
Ideal itinerary
Friday makes you choose between baseball and the concert, so the cleanest version is:
Friday: RÜFÜS DU SOL at Wrigley
Saturday: Dodgers at White Sox
Sunday: Dodgers at White Sox finale, or explore Chicago
If you want the easiest same-day baseball-and-concert pairing in Chicago, this is one of the best options of the year.
MLB games
The White Sox are home all weekend against Kansas City, with a Saturday afternoon start that leaves plenty of room for a night show.
Friday, June 26: Royals at White Sox, 6:40 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Saturday, June 27: Royals at White Sox, 3:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Sunday, June 28: Royals at White Sox, 1:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Concerts
Ed Sheeran’s LOOP Tour lands at Soldier Field on Saturday night.
Saturday, June 27: Ed Sheeran at Soldier Field
Ideal itinerary
This is Chicago’s cleanest June doubleheader:
Saturday afternoon: Royals at White Sox
Saturday night: Ed Sheeran at Soldier Field
This is one of the strongest North Side weekends of the year: a summer Cubs series at Wrigley with a legacy arena show that fits neatly on Saturday night.
MLB games
The Cubs host the Twins for a weekend series at Wrigley Field in the heart of summer.
Friday, July 17: Twins at Cubs, 7:05 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Saturday, July 18: Twins at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Sunday, July 19: Twins at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Concerts
Rush brings its Fifty Something Tour to the United Center on Saturday night.
Saturday, July 18: Rush at United Center
Ideal itinerary
A day game at Wrigley followed by a United Center show is very doable.
Saturday afternoon: Cubs vs. Twins at Wrigley
Saturday night: Rush at United Center
This is Chicago’s biggest baseball-and-festival weekend of the summer — but only if you plan it the right way.
MLB games
The Yankees visit Wrigley for one of the most in-demand baseball series on the city’s 2026 schedule.
Friday, July 31: Yankees at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Saturday, August 1: Yankees at Cubs, 6:15 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Sunday, August 2: Yankees at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Festival
At the same time, Lollapalooza takes over Grant Park for four days.
Thursday, July 30 through Sunday, August 2: Lollapalooza at Grant Park
Ideal itinerary
This weekend works best if you’re planning around a one-day Lollapalooza pass, not a full four-day festival pass. A day at Grant Park plus one Yankees-Cubs game is realistic. Trying to do all four days of Lolla and fully build around the baseball series is not.
Friday or Sunday: Yankees at Cubs
Saturday or another chosen day: one-day Lollapalooza pass
This is one of August’s best rock-and-baseball weekends, even if the concert and the Saturday game compete for the same evening window.
MLB games
The White Sox host Cleveland for a full weekend series on the South Side.
Friday, August 7: Guardians at White Sox, 6:40 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Saturday, August 8: Guardians at White Sox, 6:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Sunday, August 9: Guardians at White Sox, 1:10 p.m. CT at Rate Field
Concerts
Foo Fighters bring the Take Cover Tour 2026 to Soldier Field on Saturday night.
Saturday, August 8: Foo Fighters at Soldier Field
Ideal itinerary
The right move here is a multi-day play:
Friday: Guardians at White Sox
Saturday: Foo Fighters at Soldier Field
Sunday: White Sox matinee
One of the biggest stadium tours of the year lands in Chicago just as the Cubs open a late-August weekend series at Wrigley, giving the city a bigger baseball-and-pop run than a standard Friday-through-Sunday window.
MLB games
The Cubs host the Reds for a full weekend series at Wrigley Field as the regular season heads into the stretch run.
Friday, August 28: Reds at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Saturday, August 29: Reds at Cubs, 1:20 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Sunday, August 30: Reds at Cubs, 2:10 p.m. CT at Wrigley Field
Concerts
BTS brings the “ARIRANG World Tour” to Soldier Field for back-to-back Chicago stadium nights, starting Thursday and continuing into the weekend.
Thursday, August 27: BTS at Soldier Field
Friday, August 28: BTS at Soldier Field
Ideal itinerary
This one works best as a true multi-day play, with BTS anchoring the front end and Wrigley taking over the weekend.
Thursday: BTS at Soldier Field
Friday: BTS at Soldier Field or Cubs vs. Reds at Wrigley (or both)
Saturday: Cubs vs. Reds at Wrigley
Sunday: Cubs vs. Reds finale at Wrigley
If you’re open to one non-weekend option, Wednesday, August 5, 2026 is one of the best same-day baseball-and-concert pairings on Chicago’s calendar. The Cubs host the Dodgers in a 1:20 p.m. CT afternoon game at Wrigley, and Ariana Grande brings the Eternal Sunshine Tour to the United Center that night. It’s a rare midweek combo that still feels like a marquee Chicago day.
Best overall weekend: July 30–August 2 — Yankees at Cubs + Lollapalooza, with the important caveat that this works best if you’re planning around a one-day festival pass, not the full four-day run.
Best same-day game + concert: June 27 — Royals at White Sox + Ed Sheeran at Soldier Field.
Best rivalry weekend: May 15–17 — Cubs vs. White Sox + Bruno Mars.
Best late-season weekend: August 28–30 — Cubs vs. Reds + BTS.
Pulling off a multi-event weekend in Chicago comes down to two things: how the venues connect and how the event times line up.
A day game plus an arena or stadium concert is the easiest same-day combination. Cubs day games at Wrigley often start at 1:20 p.m. CT, while White Sox day games at Rate Field typically wrap by late afternoon as well, leaving enough buffer before most evening concerts. A baseball game usually ends by 4:00–5:00 p.m. CT, which gives you time to get across town before doors open.
Stadium concerts and night games usually work better on separate days. If both events are outdoors and both start in the evening, you’re usually choosing one or the other. That’s why the best Chicago weekends are often built as a Friday game, Saturday concert, Sunday game setup rather than trying to force everything into one night.
Chicago is spread out, but these venue pairings are more doable than they might look on a map. The easiest way to think about it: baseball first, concert second.
Wrigley Field and Rate Field are the simplest starting points because both are easy to reach on the Red Line. That makes a Cubs or White Sox game a natural anchor for the day. From there, the United Center and Soldier Field are close enough for a second event that night, especially if you leave yourself a little buffer after the final out.
The United Center is usually the easier concert follow-up. It’s a straightforward rideshare trip from either ballpark, and it’s also reachable by bus or with a short connection from the Green or Pink Lines. Soldier Field is a little less direct since it usually involves a walk from Roosevelt or a rideshare drop-off, but it’s still very manageable if you plan ahead.
Here’s the rough travel picture:
Wrigley Field to United Center: about 20–30 minutes by rideshare
Wrigley Field to Soldier Field: about 25–35 minutes by rideshare
Rate Field to Soldier Field: about 15–20 minutes by rideshare
Rate Field to United Center: about 20–30 minutes by rideshare
If you’re trying to pull off a same-day doubleheader, the cleanest setup is usually an afternoon Cubs or White Sox game followed by a night show at the United Center or Soldier Field.
A few realities are worth factoring into your planning:
No same-day MLB game + major touring concert at the same ballpark.
When Wrigley hosts a concert, the Cubs are off or on the road. White Sox postgame concerts are the exception, since those are built into the game itself at Rate Field.
Weekend demand spikes pricing.
Friday and Saturday games and concerts tend to carry higher ticket prices than weekday alternatives.
Postgame travel delays matter.
Budget an extra 15–20 minutes after the final out for crowd flow, exits and transit lines.
Weather is a real variable.
Wrigley Field, Rate Field and Soldier Field are all open-air venues, so rain can affect baseball games and stadium concerts. The United Center is the easiest weather-proof option.
White Sox postgame concerts are their own category.
Those are the simplest built-in doubleheaders on the schedule because the concert is included with your game ticket.
The best part of planning a Chicago weekend like this is that baseball and concerts do not have to live in separate tabs, separate carts or separate group texts. One minute you’re eyeing bleacher seats for a Friday afternoon at Wrigley, the next you’re comparing sightlines for a Saturday night at Soldier Field. That’s the beauty of doing it on SeatGeek: you can build your whole weekend in one place without tab-hopping your way into a headache.
Maybe you’re planning around Yankees-Cubs. Maybe it’s Bruno Mars, Ed Sheeran or a White Sox postgame concert. Start with the event you care about most, then build outward. A lot of the best Chicago weekends come together that way.
When you’re weighing two games, two concert dates or a full weekend stack, all-in pricing makes the math a lot easier. No fake bargain energy, no surprise-fee plot twist at checkout — just the real number you’re working with.
Some weekends give you options. That’s where Deal Score comes in. If you’re choosing between Friday and Sunday at Wrigley, or deciding whether to splurge on the concert and save on the game, it helps you spot the better value fast.
Chicago venues all hit differently. A seat that looks perfect on paper can feel a lot less magical once you realize there’s a pole, a steep angle or more distance than you expected. Seat maps and View From Seat photos help take the guesswork out of it before you buy.
Once your lineup looks right, checkout is quick. No overthinking, no spreadsheet spiral, no “let’s sleep on it” until the good seats disappear.
Your tickets live digitally, which makes the whole weekend easier. Some arrive right away, others closer to showtime, but either way you’re not printing anything, digging through email at the gate or trying to remember which friend bought what.
Scan in, grab a drink, find your seat and let Chicago do its thing. Maybe it’s a day game and a night concert. Maybe it’s one perfect event that turns into a whole weekend. Either way, this city knows how to give you a very good reason to stay out later than planned.
Chicago in 2026 is shaping up to be the kind of summer where every weekend starts to feel like a dare. The only real mistake is waiting too long to pick one.