The Sex Pistols have announced an Ireland and UK tour to celebrate 50 years of punk.
The band will be joined by musician Frank Carter in their The Anarchy In The UK tour later this year, to mark five decades since the release of the hit track, with dates scheduled in Dublin, London, Edinburgh, and Glasgow.
Formed in 1975, the band is made up of guitarist Steve Jones, drummer Paul Cook and bass guitarist Glen Matlock.
The tour will kick off at Dublin’s 3 Arena on 7 December before moving to Edinburgh’s Corn Exchange on 9 December and Glasgow’s O2 Academy on 10 December.
The tour will end with two nights in London, one at the O2 Academy Brixton on 18 December and a final show at Eventim Apollo on 20 December.

Glen Matlock, Frank Carter and Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols, performing on stage during their Teenage Cancer Trust show at the Royal Albert Hall, London. Photo credit: Ian West/PA Wire
The Sex Pistols disbanded in 1978 and frontman John Lydon, also known as Johnny Rotten, formed Public Image Ltd, also known as PiL.
The group were known for their rebel spirit and speaking out against the monarchy and the established political order, in provocative lyrics with songs including God Save The Queen and Anarchy In The UK.
The band reunited last year for a number of gigs, but Lydon did not perform and promised to never return to the group, after he fought a high-profile court battle against the rest of the band in a bid to stop their songs being used in a Disney+ series of their story, called Pistol.
Remembering the first year of the band being together, Cook said: “It was kind of like a commando raid. I don’t even think a lot of places knew we were playing there.

“We just turned up and set up. It was all a learning curve for us, getting out there and playing live, we were learning on the job.
“With Anarchy, I think we tapped into a feeling of unrest around the country at the time. The message was pretty simple – just have a go and get out there and do whatever you want to do. It was a new world.”
The group returned in 2024 with Carter, known for Gallows and Frank Carter and The Rattlesnakes, joining the line-up on vocals.
Cook said: “We’ve had a blast. People want to come and see us play live.
“If I must say so myself, we are a great live band.”
Jones added: “If it ain’t fun, I ain’t doing it. I’m too old for bullshit.”The band will also play shows this summer at The Piece Hall, Halifax (11 July), Castlefield Bowl, Manchester (12 July), Cardiff Castle (1 August) and Scarborough Open Air Theatre (2 August).
Source: Press Association