For a comprehensive list of concerts this summer, check out AJC music columnist Melissa Ruggieri's Atlanta summer concert guide.

A new ranking has dispelled any lingering myth that there's not enough to get into this summer in Atlanta.

Atlanta ranked No. 3 in the country on StubHub's "Top 10 U.S. Cities With the Most Live Summer Events" list for cities with the most concerts, sports and theater events this summer, trailing only behind Las Vegas at No. 1 and Boston at No. 2.

StubHub, an online ticketing service, compiled the list by calculating ticket sales on its site per capita in cities across the country.

RELATED: Music Midtown lineup includes The Killers, Beck, Twenty One Pilots for 2016 festival

Top shows leading the pack, according to StubHub, are Drake and Future's Summer Sixteen tour date at Philips Arena in August, the much-anticipated Guns N' Roses' reunion show in July at the Georgia Dome and several Wizard of Oz shows booked at Fox Theatre this month.

Here's Atlanta list of concerts and events that have sold the most tickets:

Music: Guns N Roses, The Cure, Drake

Sports: Atlanta Braves, Georgia Bulldogs, Atlanta Falcons Preseason

Theatre/Comedy: Jerry Seinfeld, Wizard of Oz, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

The Most Summer Events (Per Capita) on StubHub:

1.       Las Vegas

2.       Boston

3.       Atlanta

4.       Minneapolis

5.       Richmond, Virginia

6.       Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

7.       Syracuse, New York

8.       Seattle

9.       Washington, D.C.

10.   Cleveland, Ohio

About the Author

Keep Reading

Competitors battle it out during the Dragon's Cup, the Palmetto Knights' annual Dragon Con tournament. (Courtesy of the Palmetto Knights)

Credit: Palmetto Knights

Featured

In 2022, Georgia Power projected its winter peak electricity demand would grow by about 400 megawatts by 2031. Since then, Georgia has experienced a boom of data centers, which require a large load of electricty to run, and Georgia Power's recent forecast shows peak demand growing by 20 times the 400-megawatt estimate from just three years ago. (Illustration by Philip Robibero/AJC)

Credit: Illustration: Philip Robibero / AJC