Taylor Swift is set to reveal the full story behind her Eras Tour in a sweeping docuseries and concert film
- Oct 14, 2025
- 2 min read
13 October 2025

Taylor Swift has just announced a landmark two-part release on Disney+ that promises to peel back the curtain on the most ambitious chapter of her career: a six-episode docuseries called The End of an Era and a concert film Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour: The Final Show. The docuseries will debut December 12, 2025, with two episodes released weekly over three weeks, and it will chart the design, execution, impact, and emotional stakes of a tour that would become the highest grossing ever.
The Final Show concert film, also dropping on December 12, will feature the full recording of the tour’s last performance in Vancouver on December 8, 2024 notably including the first live presentation of tracks from her album The Tortured Poets Department, an addition not captured in earlier Eras footage.
In announcing the projects, Swift framed The End of an Era as an “intimate look” into the backstage moments, decisions, and tensions that underpinned what she called “the most important and intense chapter” in her life. She shared that the final concert in Vancouver had become a narrative fulcrum, allowing her to encapsulate not just performance but the emotional arc behind the spectacle.
The move deepens Swift’s collaboration with Disney+, which previously hosted an edited cut of the Eras Tour film. Now, she is offering fans an expanded, archival experience one that promises more context, fragility, triumph, and reflection.
This announcement arrives shortly after Swift’s release of her twelfth studio album, The Life of a Showgirl, which broke records in its first week and has been tied to her evolving public narrative and artistic identity. In the same press release, she also confirmed that she has no immediate plans to tour again, citing exhaustion after her $2 billion Eras run. She’s now largely focused on planning her wedding to Travis Kelce, which she flagged as a priority.
For fans, the two releases represent not just more Taylor content but a new way to reenter the Eras period. The docuseries offers a chance to glimpse the human story behind the showmanship, while the concert film will bring closure to a tour that spanned 149 shows across five continents.
This announcement also signals how artists are increasingly treating their legacies as multimedia narratives. Swift is not simply closing a chapter she is recontextualizing it, offering fans agency to revisit, reinterpret, and connect. The December 12 release will allow audiences not only to relive performances, but to watch the decisions, backstage breaths, and emotional ebbs that shaped them.



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