
Fall Out Boy Set to Shock the World in 2025 with New Album and Global Tour: Pop-Punk’s Phoenix Rises Again
Brace yourselves, pop-punk fans—Fall Out Boy is back and aiming higher than ever.
In what fans are already calling the comeback of the year, Fall Out Boy has officially announced the release of their ninth studio album, coupled with a massive world tour set to kick off later this year. The band that once redefined the emo and pop-punk sound in the 2000s is now preparing to shake the music world again in 2025—with a vengeance.
After the critical and commercial success of their 2023 album So Much (for) Stardust, many believed the band had reached a triumphant high point late in their career. But if their recent social media teasers and press conference are any indication, they’re just getting started.
“This is the album we’ve been waiting to make. It’s bold, it’s loud, and it’s got heart,” said frontman Patrick Stump in a press release that sent shockwaves through the fanbase. “We’re not interested in just revisiting the past—we’re aiming to evolve pop-punk and push it somewhere no one’s taken it before.”
According to sources close to the band, the new record will mix their early raw guitar-driven anthems with cinematic, genre-bending production that blurs the lines between punk, alternative rock, and modern pop. Bassist and lyricist Pete Wentz hinted that the themes of the album explore “what it means to grow up punk in a world that doesn’t want to grow up at all.”
But perhaps the biggest excitement comes from the world tour, which will span five continents, including long-awaited returns to South America and Asia, along with headlining spots at major festivals in Europe and North America.
“We’re bringing everything we’ve got,” said drummer Andy Hurley. “Lights, sound, surprises—you’ll see us like you’ve never seen us before.”
Fall Out Boy’s legacy is already cemented, but 2025 feels like more than just another album cycle—it feels like a new mission. In a time when nostalgia and reinvention collide, Fall Out Boy is proving that the genre they helped shape still has room to soar.
Pop-punk never died—it just waited for Fall Out Boy to set it on fire again.