Harry Styles has arrived in London for 12 nights at Wembley Stadium, bringing his Together, Together world tour to the UK capital with Shania Twain on the bill as support. The run starts now, and for the more than a million people who will cycle through the venue over a dozen nights, the first practical question is no longer about seats or setlists but what they can carry through the gates.
“London’s Stylers: the wait is officially over,” the singer told fans as the Wembley dates moved into view, after he announced the current world tour in January ahead of the release of his latest album, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally. He spent the first 10 tour dates in Amsterdam before making the trip to London, where the Wembley shows now mark the latest stop on the UK leg.
Wembley is following the standard bag policy used at most major UK stadiums and arenas. Each person is allowed in with one small bag, and anything larger than A4 will not be admitted. That matters because the venue does not have an official bag drop or cloakroom, so attendees who turn up with extra luggage cannot simply leave it on site and come back for it later.
For many fans, the workaround is already familiar: luggage storage facilities on South Way, beside the Ibis hotel, are being used by some attendees who need somewhere to keep larger items before they go in. The rules are a little more flexible for medical needs, with bigger bags allowed if the stadium is told before arrival. Merchandise bought outside the stadium can also be brought in, as long as the bag stays sealed until inside the venue.
That combination of a huge run, tight entry rules and no official storage makes the Wembley dates more than just another stop on Harry Styles’ tour. The concerts are unfolding now, and for ticket-holders the next step is simple: check the bag limit before leaving home, or risk spending the night looking for somewhere to store what the stadium will not let through the door.

