Critical The Madame X Tour was met with positive reviews from critics;
Rolling Stones
Rob Sheffield deemed it "excellent" and a "testament to the genius in her madness", concluding that it proves "Madonna will never be the kind of superstar who repeats her successes, sticks to her strengths, or plays it safe. Instead, she's getting weirder with age. Thank all the angels and saints for that."
Jon Pareles, writing for
The New York Times, said on his review that, "as both album and show, 'Madame X' is Madonna's latest declaration of a defiant, self-assured, flexible identity that's entirely comfortable with dualities [...] Yes, she is 61, but her music remains determinedly contemporary." Rhian Daly from
NME gave the concert a particularly positive review by calling it "powerful, empowering, stunning", and "one of the best gigs of the year." Bradley Stern, for
Paper, opined it was "unlike any other Madonna tour to date", as well as a "hybrid between an actual theatrical production and a concert." According to
Pollstars Amy Linden, the Madame X Tour is an example of what is known within the music industry as an "underplay [...] when an A or maybe B+ level musician opts out of the de rigueur arena or shed tour in favor of a more intimate and modest venue [...] With Madame X, Madonna joins the ranks of an impressive list of musicians who have also turned the volume down, so to speak." Liden concluded that being able to see the singer in "such close proximity" added a "magical and elite vibe." Will Gompertz from BBC News gave the concert a five-star rating, and opined it was "perfectly imperfect, like one of those sketchy landscapes by
Cezanne where you can see his underdrawings and misplaced lines, making it so much more beautiful and real than
Canaletto's soulless precision." Gompertz concluded his review by saying Madame X was an "adventurous piece of contemporary theatre, and a match for any of the
Tony and
Olivier-winning shows currently playing the
West End and
Broadway." Aidin Vaziri from the
San Francisco Chronicle noted how, even though the singer was "battling a cold, suffering from a torn ligament and had a bad knee", she still put on a "spectacular show." For
Las Vegas Weekly, Josh Bell considered it, despite the smaller venues, "every bit as majestic as Madonna's arena tours." The performances were also praised; Bell highlighted "
Human Nature" and "
American Life" for fitting "best with the theme of defiance", and "
Like a Prayer" for being "every bit as awe-inspiring and empowering as when it was first released." Stern felt the singer had recreated performances from the past: he saw "American Life" as a "minimized version" of the
Re-Invention World Tour (2004) performance; "
Vogue" and "
I Don't Search I Find" recalled Madonna's appearance at
Stonewall 50 – WorldPride NYC 2019; "
Dark Ballet" and "Like a Prayer" were "essentially the same stairwell-style set up" of both the
Met Gala and
Eurovision performances, and "Medellín" was "more or less a recreation of her 2019
Billboard Awards performance." For
Digital Journal, Markos Papadatos singled out the rendition of "
Crave" as "sheer bliss", and considered "Like a Prayer" the "anthem for the night" that earned the singer a "lengthy
standing ovation." Rob Sheffield applauded the inclusion of album tracks, as he felt they "work much better in a theater setting." In more critical reviews, Selena Fragassi from the
Chicago Sun-Times opined that, although the singer "relied way too heavily on
Auto-Tune, and her intimate between-act stage banter was incredibly bizarre and disjointed [...] when she was on stage all eyes were glued to her."
Entertainment Weeklys Leah Greenblatt wrote: "The show is hardly without flaws: her political messaging, though heartfelt, is often clumsily on the nose, and several set projections leaned toward the community-theater end of things." Leslie Katz classified Madame X as "paradoxically both charming and offputting [...] Although [the] setting was smaller than the arenas she's filled during her decades as the world's biggest pop star, it was hardly an intimate or casual affair." Fiorillo wrote that, "the theater of Madonna just doesn't work as a piece of theater, and great theater is clearly what she is trying to achieve." He felt the show could have benefited from "a real director [...] somebody who [...] could transform the show from a concert with some really cool theatrical elements into an evening of beautiful theater." Five years later, the magazine deemed it Madonna's ninth best concert tour, describing it as "part jukebox musical, part avant-garde performance art and part standup special".
Commercial The first tickets and VIP packages were allotted to the members of
Icon, Madonna's official fan club; price for entrances ranged from $60 to $760. Additionally, fans were given the opportunity to purchase tickets at $10 through the singer's official website. Due to an "overwhelming demand", more concerts were announced in New York and Los Angeles the same day the tour was officially confirmed. In October,
Billboard reported that the first 16 dates had grossed $9.6 million and sold over 31,401 tickets. At the 2020
Billboard year-end boxscore charts, it was reported that the Madame X Tour had raked in $36,385,935 from an audience of 124,655; additionally, the shows at the London Palladium were ranked on the seventh position of the top 25 Boxscore of the year, with $9,816,383 grossed. == Lateness criticisms and cancellations ==