Harry Styles has quietly rewritten the record book at Wembley Stadium. On July 4, he closed out a 12-show run at the venue on his Together, Together Tour, and Guinness World Records has now officially confirmed it as the longest residency by a musician at Wembley during a single run.

The previous record — 10 nights, set by Coldplay during their Music of the Spheres World Tour in 2025 — had stood for barely a year. Styles was originally scheduled for six Wembley dates, but demand was so heavy that the stint was doubled, giving him a chance at a mark few artists have ever aimed at.

The verified record

The official Guinness title reads: "The longest residency by a musician at Wembley Stadium during a single run is 12 shows and was achieved by Harry Styles (UK) at Wembley Stadium in London, UK, on 4 July 2026."

Official Guinness adjudicator Will Munford presented the certificate onstage after the final night, along with individual certificates for members of the wider tour crew — a nice touch that recognized the touring staff, riggers and production team who make a 12-night stadium run possible in the first place.

"Wembley Stadium is one of the most iconic live music venues in the world, so to achieve the longest residency by a musician there during a single run is an extraordinary achievement," Munford said. "Harry Styles' record-breaking 12-date run is a testament to the scale, ambition and cultural impact of his live performances, as well as the incredible connection he has with his fans."

From six shows to twelve

The residency kicked off on June 12 and ran through July 4, playing to a stadium capacity of roughly 90,000 each night. That works out to more than a million tickets sold in central London alone — a bigger audience than most artists reach in an entire tour. The shows were built around Styles' fourth studio album, Kiss All The Time. Disco, Occasionally., which he has been promoting since spring.

By the end of the run, London had effectively turned into a Harry Styles satellite city. Fans camped out in Wembley Park, restaurants nearby saw record foot traffic, and Transport for London ran late-night service extensions on the Metropolitan and Jubilee lines to handle the crowds.

A second Guinness title

This is not Styles' first entry in the record book. He was previously certified in 2022 for the most-streamed track in a single year, when "As It Was" racked up 2.28 billion global subscription-equivalent streams across all digital formats, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.

The new title puts him ahead of a very short list of stadium heavy-hitters — Coldplay, Taylor Swift, Ed Sheeran — in one specific and hard-earned metric: staying power at a single stadium.

What comes next

The Together, Together tour continues around the world with 67 scheduled shows across seven cities, including Amsterdam, São Paulo, Mexico City, New York, Melbourne and Sydney. Whether any of them will match Wembley's scale is doubtful — few venues have the size, transport network and ticketing muscle to sustain 12 consecutive stadium nights.

For now, the London milestone stands alone. Twelve nights, one stadium, one artist — and the tour crew, who this time got their name on the certificate too.