Event calendar for musicians & bands
Event Calendar Widget gives musicians, bands and DJs a clean tour calendar on their own website — synced from Google or iCal so every show, livestream and release date stays current. Fans browse upcoming dates and add them to their phones, with reminders that bring them to the gig.
4.9/5 from 1,284 reviews
Try the live calendar
Browse the months and open an event — this is the real widget, running below.
Made for musicians & bands
Everything you need to publish events for your artist, without the maintenance of a heavier tool.
Own your tour dates on your own domain, not just a third-party listing site
Fans add shows to Apple or Google Calendar and get a reminder before doors
A schedule view reads like a tour poster and works on link-in-bio pages
What musicians & bands put on the calendar
A few of the most common ways the calendar earns its place on the page.
- 01
Tour dates, gigs and festival appearances
- 02
Album, single and merch release dates
- 03
Livestreams, listening parties and Q&As
- 04
Meet-and-greets and signing sessions
- 05
Ticket on-sale and presale dates
- 06
Studio sessions and rehearsals for the band
What to look for in a artist calendar
The things that actually matter when you’re picking an events calendar for a artist.
Your dates, on your domain
Listing platforms own your audience and your data. A calendar embedded on your own site keeps fans on your page, where you control the look and where every visit builds your following — not a marketplace’s.
Reads like a tour list
Fans want an upcoming-dates list, not a wall of empty days. A schedule or card view that shows the next shows in order — city, venue, date — communicates faster than a month grid.
Turns interest into attendance
A fan who taps “Add to calendar” gets a reminder before the show and a head start on tickets. That nudge is the difference between a saved date and a missed one.
Goes everywhere you post
You promote across a website, a link-in-bio page and socials. One calendar you update in Google or iCal can appear on all of them, so a new date never has to be entered twice.
How to add it to your site
Three steps, no developer required — and it works the same on every website builder.
- 1
Keep events in the calendar you already use
Add your events to Google Calendar, Outlook or any iCal calendar — the same one your team already maintains. Nothing new to learn, and edits show up on your site automatically.
- 2
Style it to match your site
Pick an accent color, light or dark mode, and the layout that fits: a month grid for an overview, a schedule list for what’s next, or a compact card view for tight spaces.
- 3
Paste one line of code
Drop the embed snippet into any page. It works on every major website builder — see the platform guides for the exact steps on yours.
<!-- Event Calendar Widget embed code -->
<div id="calendar-embed-cal-dot-et"
data-calendar-link="your-calendar-id"
data-theme="#2563eb"
data-show-powered="true"
data-mode="light"
data-first-day-of-week="mon"
data-view="month"
data-show-side-panel="false"
data-timezone="America/New_York"></div>
<script src="https://calget.com/assets/js/embedcalendar.js" defer></script>Building on a specific platform? Follow the exact steps in our platform guides for WordPress, Squarespace, Wix, Webflow and more.
Musicians & Bands calendar questions
Yes. Add the ticket link to the event details and it shows up when a fan opens that date on your calendar.
When a fan taps “Add to calendar”, the show drops into their own calendar and uses their normal reminder settings, so they’re nudged before doors.
Yes. A schedule view lists upcoming shows in order, which works well for tour dates and on a phone.
If the page supports HTML embeds it works directly. Otherwise you can link to a hosted version of the same calendar.
Yes. You can publish a tour calendar for free and upgrade later for more calendars or customization.
Add your events calendar in minutes
Join thousands of websites keeping their visitors informed and engaged. No credit card required.