
Chris Stapleton Tour 2026
Next Chris Stapleton Shows
The 8 closest dates from the live Ticketmaster feed.


Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton

Chris Stapleton
Chris Stapleton Tickets Near You — Shows by City
12 citiesChris Stapleton is playing 12 cities this tour. Tap any city for exact dates, venue info, seat prices, and parking.
1 showFrom $132
1 showFrom $175
1 showFrom $144
2 showsFrom $37
1 showFrom $148
2 showsFrom $180
1 showFrom $92
1 showFrom $155
2 showsFrom $96
1 showFrom $115
1 showFrom $48
2 showsFrom $102Is Chris Stapleton Coming to Your City?
2 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Chris Stapleton across 12 of the biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
16 upcoming Chris Stapleton concerts across 12 cities in North America, with tickets from $37 USD. Live Ticketmaster availability refreshed daily.
- When is Chris Stapleton's next show?
- Sat, July 18, 2026 at Providence Park.
- How much are Chris Stapleton tickets?
- $37–$283 USD, varies by city and seat section.
- Is Chris Stapleton touring near me?
- Playing 12 cities in 2026. See the "Tickets Near You" section below for your city.
- How do I get Chris Stapleton tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Chris Stapleton shows start between 7 and 9 PM local, with doors 60–90 minutes earlier. Exact time is on each ticket.
- How long is the concert?
- Roughly 90–150 minutes including the opener and a short encore.
Chris Stapleton Ticket Prices 2026— Cheapest Seats & Average Cost
Chris Stapleton ticket prices vary by city, venue size, day of week, and seat section. Live price breakdown across all 2026 tour stops:
Chris Stapleton Concert FAQ
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About Chris Stapleton
CChris Stapleton is the American Country artist taking the 2026 tour through arenas, amphitheaters, and outdoor festival stages — the kind of country show built around a full live band, a deep singalong catalog, and a setlist that mixes hits with stripped-down storytelling moments. 16 confirmed dates across 12 cities this run. Tickets currently start at $37. Tour routing typically spans major North American cities, with Canadian stops usually including arena-sized venues in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, and Montreal, and US stops covering New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, Seattle, and other top metros.
Inside Chris Stapleton
Chris Stapleton is the bearded, plainspoken Kentuckian who walked onto the 2015 CMA Awards stage as a mid-tier songwriter and walked off it as the most important country artist of his generation. The Justin Timberlake duet on "Tennessee Whiskey" that night did half the work; the other half had been done quietly for a decade in Music Row writers' rooms, where Stapleton had been handing hit singles to George Strait, Kenny Chesney, Luke Bryan and Darius Rucker while keeping the rougher, bluesier, more honest songs for a record he wasn't sure anybody would ever cut. That record turned out to be Traveller, a sprawling double-LP that came out earlier in 2015 to modest first-week numbers and, within ninety days of the CMA broadcast, vaulted to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and stayed inside the country top ten for years. Everything since has been a controlled burn at the very top of the format — From A Room Vol. 1 and Vol. 2 in 2017, the soul-deep Starting Over in 2020, the road-warrior Higher in 2023, eight Grammys across country, Americana and bluegrass categories, and an All-American Road Show tour that fills amphitheaters and arenas without ever resorting to pyrotechnics, video walls or a single backing track. He sings like he means it because he does; the band — featuring his wife Morgane Stapleton on harmony vocals — plays like they've been a bar band together for twenty years because, give or take, they have. This page is the landing spot for current tour dates, ticket information, setlists and city-specific show information, kept evergreen year-round so it tracks every All-American Road Show leg as the routing rolls out from amphitheaters into arenas and back again.
About Chris Stapleton
Christopher Alvin Stapleton was born April 15, 1978 in Lexington, Kentucky and raised in nearby Staffordsville, a coal-country pocket of Johnson County where his father worked in the mines and his mother kept a record collection that ran the gauntlet from gospel to soul to outlaw country. He started at Vanderbilt on an engineering track in the late 1990s, dropped out after a year, and made the four-hour drive over the mountain to Nashville with a guitar and the early outline of a songwriter's life. The first decade in Music Row was a slow build: a publishing deal at Sea Gayle, a co-write credit on Kenny Chesney's "Never Wanted Nothing More" that hit No. 1 in 2007, more than a hundred and seventy major-label cuts across the back catalogue of country radio's A-list — George Strait's "Love's Gonna Make It Alright", Luke Bryan's "Drink a Beer", Darius Rucker's "Come Back Song", Adele's "If It Hadn't Been For Love" — and parallel bandleader gigs fronting the SteelDrivers, an acoustic-bluegrass outfit, and the Jompson Brothers, a louder Southern-rock side project. By the time he signed his Mercury Nashville solo deal and started recording Traveller in 2014, the catalogue of unrecorded Stapleton originals was a decade deep.
Traveller came out in May 2015 to respectful reviews and modest sales. Then came the November 4th CMA Awards broadcast: New Artist of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year, Album of the Year, and a closing-slot performance of "Tennessee Whiskey" and "Drink You Away" with Justin Timberlake that crashed Apple's music store inside an hour. Traveller went to No. 1 on the Billboard 200 the following week, eventually selling more than four million copies in the U.S. alone. From A Room Vol. 1 followed in 2017, debuted at No. 2 on the all-genre chart and won the Grammy for Best Country Album. From A Room Vol. 2 closed out the year. Starting Over arrived in 2020 and added a Grammy sweep across Best Country Album, Best Country Song and Best Country Solo Performance. Higher landed in November 2023, debuted in the top five on both the country and all-genre charts, and slotted seamlessly into a touring catalogue that needed no padding. Eight Grammys, fifteen-plus CMA Awards, ten-plus ACM Awards, the All-American Road Show that has been continuously on the road since 2017, and a Mercury Nashville home base that has never once tried to chase him toward whatever the format's current trend happens to be.
Chris Stapleton tour dates
The current Chris Stapleton touring chapter is the All-American Road Show, the ongoing tour brand he launched in 2017 and has kept rolling without serious interruption ever since. The routing mixes outdoor amphitheaters — Jiffy Lube Live, Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre, Ameris Bank Amphitheatre, Saratoga Performing Arts Center — with hockey-and-basketball arenas like Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Madison Square Garden in New York and Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, plus a small handful of stadium dates each cycle when the demand justifies the building. Sets run a tight 90 to 105 minutes with no intermission and no backing tracks; Stapleton, Morgane on harmonies, and a four-piece road band work the catalogue front to back with the slow-burn pacing of a roadhouse residency rather than the build-and-release theatrics of a pop arena show. Support acts rotate by leg and lean heavily on the artists Stapleton actually listens to — Marty Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives, Marcus King, Allen Stone, Sheryl Crow, Yola, the War and Treaty, Willie Nelson at certain marquee dates. Door times typically run 5:30 to 6:00 p.m. for amphitheater shows and 6:30 p.m. for arenas, with the opener on around 7:30 and Stapleton at 9:00 sharp. Stage production is deliberately spare — a few back-line risers, warm tungsten lighting that never strobes, no LED backdrop and no choreography — which is a deliberate choice rather than a budget call: Stapleton has said in interviews he wants the songs and the band to carry the room without anything competing for the audience's attention. The grid above pulls the live schedule directly from Ticketmaster and updates as new All-American Road Show dates are confirmed and added.
Chris Stapleton tickets
Chris Stapleton tickets are sold through Ticketmaster as the primary outlet, with secondary inventory on StubHub, SeatGeek, Vivid Seats and Ticketmaster's own verified resale platform linked from each event card on this page. Amphitheater pricing for an All-American Road Show date typically opens with reserved-pavilion seats in the $80–$150 range, lawn pricing at $40–$70, and front-of-stage pit or premium pavilion seats climbing into the $200–$400 zone. Arena dates run higher — lower-bowl reserved seats $120–$300, upper-bowl $50–$110, floor and VIP packages past $500. Fan club presales through the official Chris Stapleton site usually open the Tuesday before the Friday public on-sale and remain the best path to good seats on high-demand markets like Nashville, Toronto, New York and Los Angeles. Ticketmaster Verified Fan registration has been used on select on-sales to keep bot inventory off the early window; sign up through the official site as soon as a date is announced to keep registration windows open. Citi cardmember and venue presales fill the rest of the week. Dynamic pricing applies on most Stapleton on-sales, so face value can move during the queue — refresh the secondary market the week of the show on non-major-market amphitheater dates and you'll often catch a 20 to 30 percent drop on lawn and reserved-pavilion pairs. Always buy from a marketplace with a buyer guarantee.
Chris Stapleton setlist
A current Chris Stapleton setlist runs about eighteen to twenty-two songs across 90 to 105 minutes with the band loose and the pacing patient. The night usually opens with a hard-driving cut — "Midnight Train to Memphis", "Hard Livin'" or "Watch You Burn" — to set the road-band tone, then settles into a mid-set songwriter run that pulls in "Nobody to Blame", "Whiskey and You", "Fire Away" and the Charlie Daniels-styled "Parachute". The Justin Timberlake-vintage "Tennessee Whiskey" lands roughly two-thirds of the way through and turns into a full ten-minute extended jam on most nights, with Morgane stepping forward on the harmony lead. "Broken Halos", "Cold" and "Starting Over" anchor the back half, with the slower ballad "Either Way" or "More of You" usually tucked in as the quiet emotional pivot before the closing run. "Traveller" closes the night more often than any other song — it's the title track of the breakthrough record and the only consistent encore he plays — and Stapleton frequently rolls a cover into the back half, with a Willie Nelson, Charlie Daniels or Tom Petty number the running tradition depending on the leg. Check setlist.fm after the first night of any new All-American Road Show leg for the current run order; fan submissions usually go up within a couple of hours of last call.
Tour cities
Nashville
Nashville is the home-room show. Stapleton has lived and written in Music City since the early 2000s, and his Nashville dates — typically at Bridgestone Arena downtown — carry the weight of a hometown showcase. Bridgestone holds roughly 19,000 for an end-stage concert and sits at the foot of Lower Broadway, which means the post-show bar crawl is built into the walk back to your hotel. Fellow songwriters fill the front rows; surprise guest walk-ons from George Strait, Vince Gill, Sheryl Crow, Justin Timberlake or whichever Music Row legend happens to be in town that night are part of the running tradition. Bridgestone parking fills early; the easier play is a Lyft into the SoBro arts district and a ten-minute walk in. Lower-bowl tickets sell first on the on-sale.
Lexington
Lexington is the literal hometown — Stapleton was born here in April 1978 — and a tour stop in central Kentucky pulls fans from across the bluegrass region, eastern Kentucky coal country and out into West Virginia. Rupp Arena downtown is the usual venue, a 20,500-cap room that hosts the Kentucky Wildcats and shifts into end-stage concert configuration for arena nights. The crowd skews deep-country and deep-loyal — this is the room where the "Tennessee Whiskey" extended jam runs longest because nobody wants the night to end. Parking lots around the convention center open about three hours before doors; the LexTran trolley loop runs through downtown on event nights. Lower-bowl seats and the floor go first; the 300-level upper ring is the value buy.
Atlanta
Atlanta is one of Stapleton's strongest Southeast markets and the All-American Road Show typically plays Ameris Bank Amphitheatre in Alpharetta on the amphitheater swing and State Farm Arena downtown when he routes an arena leg through the Southeast. Ameris Bank seats roughly 12,000 across pavilion and lawn and sits in the suburbs north of the city, which means traffic on GA-400 is the real determinant of door time. State Farm Arena is MARTA-accessible from the Five Points station, which is the easy play on a sold-out arena night. Atlanta crowds turn out for the songwriter material as loudly as the hits — the "Whiskey and You" singalong here is one of the loudest on the tour. Lawn at Ameris Bank is the value seat; the pavilion is worth the upgrade.
Dallas
Dallas-Fort Worth is a flagship Texas market for Stapleton, with the All-American Road Show splitting between Dos Equis Pavilion in Fair Park and the larger American Airlines Center downtown depending on the leg. Dos Equis Pavilion holds roughly 20,000 across reserved seats and lawn, sits next to the Texas State Fair grounds, and gets brutally hot in summer — bring water and plan to be inside the gates before the opener. American Airlines Center holds 20,000 for an end-stage arena concert and is the easier indoor play on a Saturday night. Texas crowds turn the "Parachute" and "Whiskey and You" singalongs into full-volume room-shakers. DART rail drops at Victory Station a two-minute walk from American Airlines Center.
Toronto
Toronto is the marquee Canadian stop on every All-American Road Show leg that hits the eastern swing — Stapleton plays Scotiabank Arena downtown, the 19,800-cap home of the Maple Leafs and Raptors, attached to Union Station via the SkyWalk. The Canadian crowd skews older and more attentive than the Texas arena nights; the "Tennessee Whiskey" jam plays to dead silence on the slow verses and full-volume singalong on the choruses. GO Transit and the TTC subway both drop within five minutes of the gates, which makes Scotiabank one of the easiest North American arenas to access without a car. Lower-bowl tickets sell first on the on-sale; the 300-level upper rings hold the best price-to-view ratio in the building. Fan club presales are the only reliable path to good Toronto floor seats.
Chicago
Chicago gets a Stapleton arena date at the United Center on most North American legs — the 23,500-cap West Side building that hosts the Bulls and Blackhawks — and amphitheater swings route through Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre out in Tinley Park. United Center is the bigger room and the louder room; the Chicago country crowd is bigger than the coastal-music-press version of the city suggests, and the singalong on "Broken Halos" runs deep into the upper bowl. CTA Green Line to Ashland or a rideshare into the lots around the arena are the practical access plays. Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre is car-only from the city; budget 60 to 90 minutes of post-show parking-lot drain on a sold-out summer night.
New York
New York gets a Chris Stapleton arena date at Madison Square Garden on most North American tour legs — the Garden is the marquee Northeast stop and a near-sellout across the lower bowl on every recent on-sale. The 7th Avenue building seats roughly 20,000 for an end-stage concert and sits directly above Penn Station, which makes it the easiest concert arrival in the country: any subway, NJ Transit, LIRR or Amtrak line drops you inside the arena in under five minutes. New York crowds skew more eclectic than the Southeast markets — Stapleton's Americana and soul credentials pull a chunk of the audience that came in through Spotify rather than country radio, and the "Tennessee Whiskey" duet section gets a standing ovation regardless. Lower-bowl pricing runs higher here than any other tour stop; the 200-level is the value buy.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles is the West Coast marquee. Stapleton plays Crypto.com Arena downtown on arena swings — 20,000 cap, home of the Lakers and Kings — and the Hollywood Bowl or BMO Stadium for one-off summer dates with a heavier production. Crypto.com is Metro Expo Line accessible from Pico Station, which is the practical play given downtown traffic on an event night. LA crowds run pop-Americana — Stapleton's Southern California audience came in heavy through the Justin Timberlake CMA moment and the Starting Over Grammy cycle — and the "Cold" singalong is one of the bigger emotional moments of the night. Lower-bowl prices climb fast on the on-sale; the 300-level upper ring holds value, and the floor is the premium tier reserved for fan-club pre-sale buyers.
Cheapest Chris Stapleton Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Chris Stapleton tickets can move fast, especially for big-city dates, but there are a few reliable ways to land the best price.
- Buy during the official on-sale window. Face-value primary tickets on Ticketmaster are almost always cheaper than resale — the listings above show primary availability first.
- Consider mid-week shows. Tuesday and Wednesday Chris Stapleton dates often list 15 to 30 percent lower than weekend stops in the same city.
- Go upper-level. Upper 300-level or balcony sections typically start near $37 and still offer a strong view of the stage.
- Watch last-minute drops.Resellers often slash prices 24 to 48 hours before doors open, especially for mid-week dates that haven't sold out.
- Compare nearby cities. It can be cheaper to drive 2 to 3 hours to a smaller market — check the full cheap Chris Stapleton tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
Chris StapletonVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Chris Stapleton VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Chris Stapletonconcerts often include early venue entry, a premium seat or pit access, an exclusive tour merchandise item, and occasionally a pre-show soundcheck or photo opportunity. Meet and greet packages, when offered, sell out fastest — if you see one listed on the show page above, it's worth grabbing immediately. For the full breakdown of current VIP and meet and greet options on this tour, see the Chris StapletonVIP & meet and greet guide.
Chris StapletonPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Chris Stapleton 2026 tour typically open 1 to 3 days before the general on-sale and are the best way to lock in seats before inventory drops. The most common presales for Chris Stapletontour stops are Ticketmaster Verified Fan, Live Nation presale, the artist's official newsletter or fan club, and credit-card presales from Citi, American Express, or Capital One in North America. Sign-up links usually go live from the artist's official site 1 to 2 weeks before the on-sale. See the Chris Stapleton presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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