What We Know About Pussycat Dolls' Canceled Tour
The highly anticipated Pussycat Dolls reunion has now left fans reeling with all but one date on the U.S. leg of their PCD Forever Tour being canceled.
Nicole Scherzinger, Ashley Roberts and Kimberly Wyattannounced in March that a 53-date tour of North America, Europe and the U.K would kick off in June. The shows were set to feature special guests Lil' Kim and Mya, before concluding at The O2 arena in London on October 13.
Two months later, the girl group released a statement announcing their "difficult and heartbreaking" decision to stop concerts in the U.S. and Canada after "taking an honest look" at sales.
Scroll down to learn more about the Pussycat Dolls' canceled tour:
What Have the Pussycat Dolls Said About Their Canceled Tour?
The group, which rose to fame in the mid-aughts with hits including "Don't Cha," "Buttons" and "When I Grow Up," announced in May that they were scrapping the bulk of their North American run.
"When we announced the PCD FOREVER Tour, we hoped to bring the show to fans across the world," the group wrote via Instagram at the time. "After taking an honest look at the North American run, we've made the difficult and heartbreaking decision to cancel all but one of the North America dates."
What Will Be the Pussycat Dolls' Only North American Show?
The Pussycat Dolls are set to perform at the June 6 OutLoud festival. "The LGBTQ+ community has shown us so much love and support throughout our career, and we're honored to be part of a weekend rooted in joy, pride, music and chosen family," the group shared in May. "Our UK and European dates are still moving forward as planned, and the response has been incredible, with several shows already sold out."
How Does Nicole Scherzinger Feel About The Canceled Pussycat Dolls Tour?
Scherzinger is still processing her emotions after the Pussycat Dolls scrapped nearly every U.S. date on their PCD Forever Tour.
"Nicole is disappointed," a source exclusively told Us Weekly in March. "She was really excited to get back out there with Ashley and Kimberly to celebrate a new era, but now she feels they didn't get a chance to showcase what they can do."
The insider shared at the time that the trio had been "too ambitious" in mapping out their first tour since 2009's Doll Domination, which resulted in disappointing ticket sales.
"They went from not touring for over 15 years to booking big arenas like Madison Square Garden with only one new song to back it," the source pointed out, referring to the comeback single "Club Song." (The group released the track in March but has yet to perform it live.)
The insider continued, "They overestimated the demand."
Scherzinger, however, is "trying to look on the bright side" because the Pussycat Dolls are still moving forward with their European dates. While Scherzinger is "beyond excited" about it, the source shared that "it's hard not to feel defeated."
"She's been through this before," the insider added. "Her solo album Her Name Is Nicole was shelved [in 2007], the Dolls also had to cancel their last reunion tour [in 2020] and she has a ton of other music that she never got to put out. It's been a tough road for Nicole despite her other successes, but she's grateful for the continuous love from across the pond."
Despite calling off 32 shows, the Pussycat Dolls are hopeful that fan videos from the remaining 21 dates could lead to renewed interest.
"Nicole is hopeful the Dolls can figure out something else in the U.S. after people see the show they're putting together for Europe, which is going to be very special," the insider said. (Us Weekly reached out to Scherzinger's rep for comment at the time.)
Copyright 2026 Us Weekly. All rights reserved
This story was originally published May 13, 2026 at 3:15 PM.