The Foreigner setlist for the “50th Anniversary Tour” has been revealed. Foreigner is known for classic rock shows built around big hooks, familiar sing-alongs, and songs that have held up live for decades. Their concerts usually move between harder rock songs, slower ballads, and the big anthems people wait for. That mix gives the set a strong pace without it feeling too repetitive. The 50th Anniversary Tour is expected to lean into that legacy, with a set built around the songs most tied to the band’s long live history.
What songs are on the Foreigner’s 50th Anniversary Tour setlist?
The following is what Foreigner is expected to play in their setlist for the 50th Anniversary Tour. This is based on the first few stops of the tour, where the shape of the set is already starting to come through. The best-known songs seem to make up the core of the night, while other tracks are worked in around them to keep the flow steady. From those early shows, there’s already a pretty good sense of where the set is heading. As always, this expected setlist is subject to change.
- Night Life
- Woman in Black
- Cold as Ice
- Waiting for a Girl Like You
- I’m Gonna Win
- Don’t Let Go
- Luanne (with Lou Gramm)
- Girl on the Moon (with Lou Gramm)
- Urgent (with Lou Gramm)
- Break It Up
- Feels Like the First Time
- Juke Box Hero
Encore:
- I Want to Know What Love Is (with Lou Gramm)
- Hot Blooded (with Lou Gramm)
Once the show gets going, some parts of the set can still move around a little depending on the night. Crowd reactions can affect the pacing, especially around the biggest sing-along moments. The stage setup can play a role too, since lighting and transitions may shape where certain songs sit best. Venue size can also matter, as some songs land differently in bigger arenas than they do in smaller spaces. At the same time, the band may decide to move a song around if it feels like a better fit in that moment. Those small changes help keep the show feeling natural without changing the overall structure.
The 50th Anniversary Tour fits naturally with the kind of live show Foreigner has built over the years. The set leans heavily on the songs people most associate with the band, but it still leaves room for variety in how the night moves. That keeps it from feeling like a simple greatest-hits run-through. Instead, the show keeps a steady flow, with the bigger moments landing where they should while the rest of the set fills things out around them.
