BTS Members’ Discharge Dates: Comeback Plans Now
BTS members finished their mandatory service in stages across 2024 and 2025, clearing the path for the first full-group album and tour since 2022. The staggered returns gave the septet time to regroup privately before HYBE locked March 2026 as the comeback date, with a world tour to follow. Fans tracking the timeline now have the complete schedule and the confirmed next chapter.
Discharge timeline starts
Jin completed service in June 2024 after enlisting in late 2022. His return marked the first visible step toward an OT7 reunion and triggered early fan gatherings outside HYBE. The group posted together that day, signaling intent rather than speculation.
J-Hope followed in October 2024 after his April 2023 enlistment. His discharge kept the momentum moving without fanfare or new music yet. Both 2024 returns gave the remaining members a fixed target for their own exits.
RM and V left together on June 10 2025 after serving since December 2023. RM had played in a military band while V worked with a special police unit. Fans lined the streets in Chuncheon, and the pair told crowds they expected to perform again soon.
Final active duty exits
Jimin and Jungkook were discharged the next day, June 11 2025, also from the same December 2023 intake. Their releases brought six members back into civilian life and shifted attention to the last remaining schedule. Livestream clips circulated quickly among U.S. ARMY accounts.
Suga finished last on June 21 2025 after completing alternative social service duty that began in September 2023. HYBE posted confirmation on Weverse without a public event, citing crowd concerns. His exit closed the service chapter for the full group.
With every member now accounted for, internal planning accelerated immediately. Members began album sessions in July 2025, and the label moved from private updates to public scheduling.
HYBE locks 2026 dates
Officials announced the March 2026 album release in June 2025, naming the project ARIRANG in subsequent reports. The date sits roughly nine months after the final discharge, giving the group time to write and record together. Variety and The Korea Herald carried the confirmation from HYBE sources.
The same announcement included a world tour running 2026 into 2027. It opens in South Korea in April 2026 and stretches across more than seventy dates in multiple regions. Early ticket demand discussions already appear on U.S. fan forums.
HYBE displayed a “We are back” banner at its Seoul building on the day RM and V were released. The visual cue aligned with the label’s messaging that full-group activities would resume once service ended.
Album work begins
Recording started in July 2025 once all seven members could attend sessions together. Reports describe a focused period with fewer public sightings than during individual solo eras. The group is balancing new material with the need to re-establish live chemistry.
ARIRANG is positioned as the fifth Korean studio album. Early details remain limited to the title and release window, keeping emphasis on the music rather than rollout spectacle. Members have referenced the project in Weverse comments without sharing track specifics yet.
Producers and staff who worked on prior group albums are reportedly involved again. The continuity suggests HYBE wants the sound to connect directly to pre-hiatus material while reflecting the members’ individual growth during service.
Tour planning details
The 2026–2027 itinerary begins with multiple Seoul shows before moving to Japan, Southeast Asia, North America, and Europe. Organizers have not released city-by-city dates, but the scale indicates standard arena and stadium routing. U.S. markets are expected to receive several stops based on past patterns.
Production teams are already discussing stage concepts that incorporate the new album’s themes. Early vendor conversations point to larger scale than the Permission to Dance tour, reflecting the extended break and pent-up demand. No streaming partner has been confirmed for the opening shows.
Ticketing strategy remains under discussion. HYBE has previously used both global platforms and local partners, and current fan chatter focuses on verified fan club access windows ahead of general sales. Exact procedures will likely surface closer to the Seoul dates.
Media and fan response
U.S. outlets including NPR, The Guardian, and NBC covered the June 2025 discharges with emphasis on fan turnout and emotional reunions. Coverage framed the staggered exits as the final hurdle before group activities could resume. Social clips of airport arrivals and base exits spread quickly across platforms.
ARMY accounts on X have tracked every milestone since Jin’s 2024 return, creating running countdowns and location threads. Discussions now center on setlist predictions and which older tracks might return after four years off stage. The tone remains celebratory rather than speculative.
Industry observers note that the March 2026 timing aligns with awards season cycles and gives the group room to promote before summer festival windows. The schedule also positions BTS members ahead of potential solo projects that could compete for attention later in the year.
Label coordination moves
HYBE has kept most operational updates internal since the final discharge. Staff focus remains on securing venues, finalizing production elements, and coordinating international promotions. Public statements have stayed limited to the March album date and tour outline.
Individual member schedules now revolve around group commitments. Any solo music or variety appearances are expected to pause or shift once full rehearsals begin. The label has not announced interim releases or subunit projects for the coming months.
Marketing teams are preparing global campaigns that reference the full service timeline without dwelling on it. The narrative centers on reunion and continuity rather than the interruption, matching the tone of recent member comments on Weverse.
Streaming and market impact
Catalog streams for BTS members rose noticeably after each 2025 discharge, according to platform data shared in industry reports. The pattern mirrors earlier spikes during Jin and J-Hope’s returns. Analysts expect another measurable lift once new music drops in March.
Merchandise and fan project coordination have already begun for the tour. Early discussions on U.S. forums include bulk buying plans and city-specific charity tie-ins, consistent with past cycles. HYBE has not released official pre-order windows yet.
Competitor agencies are watching the timeline closely. Several acts with overlapping fan demographics have adjusted their own 2026 schedules to avoid direct clashes, according to booking sources cited in trade coverage.
Next milestones ahead
The immediate focus remains the album recording window that opened in July 2025. Members have indicated they are working daily, though no release of individual credits or teaser material has occurred. The next public checkpoint is expected closer to the new year.
Rehearsal schedules will likely intensify by early 2026 once the album is locked. HYBE has reserved Seoul venues for both the album showcase and tour opener, suggesting a compressed but coordinated launch period. International dates will follow in sequence.
Fans continue to mark time with monthly anniversary posts and location updates. The collective mood has shifted from discharge countdowns to anticipation of the first full stage appearance since 2022.
Reunion in motion
The completed discharge timeline removes the last external barrier for BTS members. With the March 2026 album and subsequent world tour now confirmed, the group moves from individual service obligations to collective planning. The schedule provides a clear path forward for both the members and the audience that has followed each return.

