Twisted Sister Expands Fall 2026 Tour With Sebastian Bach, Adds Three New Dates
Three new stops in Indiana, West Virginia, and Florida push the nine-date fall run from Alaska to St. Petersburg.
Twisted Sister has expanded its fall 2026 reunion tour with Sebastian Bach on lead vocals, announcing three new dates in Gary, Indiana; Charles Town, West Virginia; and St. Petersburg, Florida. The additions bring the total run to nine shows, kicking off September 4 in Palmer, Alaska. Bach stepped in after founding frontman Dee Snider withdrew from the tour due to health concerns, with Snider's blessing.
New Dates and Ticket Details
The three newly confirmed shows are October 18 at Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana in Gary, November 14 at The Event Center at Hollywood Casino in Charles Town, West Virginia, and December 11 at Ferg's Pavilion in St. Petersburg, Florida.
A presale for the newly added shows launches Wednesday, June 25, at 10 a.m. local time using the code ‘TWISTED2026.' General on-sale begins Friday, June 27, at 10 a.m. local time. The full list of dates is also available at twistedsister.com.
Full Twisted Sister Featuring Sebastian Bach 2026 Tour Schedule
The complete nine-date fall run, with newly added shows in bold:
- Sept. 4 — Palmer, AK @ Borealis Theatre
- Sept. 6 — Salem, OR @ The Pavilion at the Oregon State Fairgrounds
- Sept. 12 — Durant, OK @ Choctaw Grand Theater
- Sept. 27 — Puyallup, WA @ Washington State Fair
- Oct. 8 — Niagara Falls, ON @ OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino
- Oct. 10 — Windsor, ON @ The Colosseum at Caesars Windsor
- **Oct. 18 — Gary, IN @ Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana**
- **Nov. 14 — Charles Town, WV @ The Event Center at Hollywood Casino**
- **Dec. 11 — St. Petersburg, FL @ Ferg's Pavilion**
How Sebastian Bach Came to Front Twisted Sister
Twisted Sister originally announced a 50th anniversary reunion tour last September, a decade after retiring from the road. Those plans unraveled in early 2026 when Snider disclosed that health challenges forced his sudden and unexpected resignation from the band, and the initial dates were scrapped.
Guitarists Jay Jay French and Eddie Ojeda revealed in March that the tour would proceed with Bach, the former Skid Row frontman, handling vocal duties. Snider subsequently confirmed his support for the arrangement, saying of Bach: “He's a true fan & will honor what I did with every show!”
Snider addressed fan concern about his condition directly on his House of Hair radio program. “The rumors have run wild that I am on my deathbed,” he said. “I am not. I just can't do those things that I did in my 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s and even 60s. Alright? Otherwise I'm alive and well. I'm enjoying life.” He added: “You won't see me on the stage kicking ass like I used to because that will mess me up. Thank you very much for cheering me on. I'm OK. I just can't do that anymore. And you know what? The truth of the matter is: I don't want you to see me up there being less than you expect me to be. You got memories of a great show that I did? That's what I want to leave you with.”
One additional personnel note: drummer Joey Cassata, known for his work with Ace Frehley among others, will fill the seat held by the late Twisted Sister drummer AJ Pero for these shows.
What we know
- Three new dates have been added to Twisted Sister's fall 2026 tour: October 18 in Gary, Indiana; November 14 in Charles Town, West Virginia; and December 11 in St. Petersburg, Florida.
- The fall tour now totals nine shows and launches September 4 in Palmer, Alaska.
- Sebastian Bach, former frontman of Skid Row, is handling lead vocal duties in place of Dee Snider.
- Jay Jay French and Eddie Ojeda announced in March that Bach would take over lead singer duties after Snider backed out due to health concerns.
- Snider endorsed Bach's involvement, stating: “He's a true fan & will honor what I did with every show!”
- Drummer Joey Cassata will fill the drum chair previously held by the late AJ Pero.
- A presale begins Wednesday at 10 a.m. local time with the code ‘TWISTED2026,' and general on-sale starts Friday at 10 a.m. local time.
- Twisted Sister originally announced a 50th anniversary reunion tour last September, ten years after retiring from the road.
The take
The Twisted Sister situation is a genuinely unusual case in the legacy rock world, and the way it has been handled is worth noting. Snider's public, gracious exit and his explicit endorsement of Bach give the tour a legitimacy that surrogate-vocalist runs don't always enjoy. Fans have long memories, and a replacement singer who arrives under a cloud of acrimony tends to face an uphill battle at the box office and in the press. That's not the dynamic here.
Bach is also a shrewder choice than a random hire would be. He is a peer, a card-carrying member of the same late-1980s glam-metal generation, and his own catalog with Skid Row overlaps heavily with the Twisted Sister audience. He knows how to work a crowd that wants big choruses and theatrical energy, which is precisely what a Twisted Sister set demands.
The casino and state fair circuit the band is working is a well-worn path for legacy acts at this stage of their careers. It offers guaranteed fees, built-in audiences, and lower logistical overhead than arena touring. The geographic spread here, from Alaska to Ontario to Florida, suggests the band is casting a wide net to gauge demand before potentially committing to a denser run. If these nine dates sell well, a second leg would be a logical next step, though nothing of the sort has been announced.
Why it matters
For fans who assumed Twisted Sister's 2016 retirement was permanent, this tour represents a rare second chance to see the band perform its catalog live. Snider's health-related exit is a reminder of the physical toll that high-energy rock performance takes on artists now in their 60s and 70s, a reality the entire classic rock touring ecosystem is navigating. How this run performs commercially will likely influence whether French and Ojeda continue under the Twisted Sister banner and whether the Bach pairing becomes a longer-term arrangement.
What's next
The presale for the three newly added shows opens Wednesday at 10 a.m. local time with the code ‘TWISTED2026,' followed by general on-sale Friday at 10 a.m. local time. The tour itself gets underway September 4 at the Borealis Theatre in Palmer, Alaska, and runs through December 11 in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Frequently asked questions
Why is Sebastian Bach singing for Twisted Sister instead of Dee Snider?
Dee Snider withdrew from the planned reunion tour in early 2026 due to health concerns, citing challenges that forced his sudden and unexpected resignation. Guitarists Jay Jay French and Eddie Ojeda announced in March that Bach would take over vocal duties.
Did Dee Snider approve of Sebastian Bach replacing him?
Yes. Snider publicly endorsed the move, saying of Bach: “He's a true fan & will honor what I did with every show!”
How many shows are on Twisted Sister's fall 2026 tour?
The tour now includes nine shows total, running from September 4 in Palmer, Alaska through December 11 in St. Petersburg, Florida.
When do tickets go on sale for the new Twisted Sister dates?
A presale begins Wednesday at 10 a.m. local time using the code ‘TWISTED2026,' and tickets go on sale to the general public Friday at 10 a.m. local time.
Who is playing drums for Twisted Sister on the 2026 tour?
Joey Cassata, known for his work with Ace Frehley among others, will fill the drum chair previously held by the late Twisted Sister drummer AJ Pero.