
Cole Swindell Tour 2026
Next Cole Swindell Shows
The 8 closest dates from the live Ticketmaster feed.


Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell
Cole Swindell Tickets Near You — Shows by City
11 citiesCole Swindell is playing 11 cities this tour. Tap any city for exact dates, venue info, seat prices, and parking.
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1 showFrom $90Is Cole Swindell Coming to Your City?
1 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Cole Swindell across 12 of the biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
11 upcoming Cole Swindell concerts across 11 cities in North America, with tickets from $57 USD. Live Ticketmaster availability refreshed daily.
- When is Cole Swindell's next show?
- Sun, July 19, 2026 at The Sandbar at Red Rocks Casino.
- How much are Cole Swindell tickets?
- $57–$130 USD, varies by city and seat section.
- Is Cole Swindell touring near me?
- Playing 11 cities in 2026. See the "Tickets Near You" section below for your city.
- How do I get Cole Swindell tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Cole Swindell 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.
Cole Swindell Ticket Prices 2026— Cheapest Seats & Average Cost
Cole Swindell ticket prices vary by city, venue size, day of week, and seat section. Live price breakdown across all 2026 tour stops:
Cole Swindell Concert FAQ
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About Cole Swindell
CCole Swindell 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. 11 confirmed dates across 11 cities this run. Tickets currently start at $57. 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 Cole Swindell
Cole Swindell is the Georgia-born country singer-songwriter who spent the early 2010s selling tour merchandise for Luke Bryan, slipped his own demos into Bryan's hands between shows, and watched his debut single "Chillin' It" climb to the top of the country chart before he had a record deal of his own. The Warner Music Nashville contract followed, the self-titled debut album in 2014 went platinum, and a near-decade run of singalong country radio has kept him on amphitheater and arena bills ever since. He's the artist behind "You Should Be Here" — the title track of his 2016 second album, a four-week No. 1 on Billboard's Country Airplay chart that he wrote about his late father — and "She Had Me at Heads Carolina", the 2022 single that interpolates Jo Dee Messina's 1996 classic into a chart-topping bar-band anthem. The catalogue spans the self-titled 2014 debut (the "Chillin' It" record), You Should Be Here (2016), All of It (2018), Stereotype (2022) and Stereotype Broken (2023), with eleven No. 1 singles on Country Airplay across the run and a touring chapter that swings between amphitheater headline dates, arena co-bills with Bryan and Jason Aldean, and festival main-stage slots at Stagecoach, Faster Horses, Country Thunder and the CMA Fest in Nashville. This page is the landing spot for current Cole Swindell tour dates, ticket information, setlists and city-specific show information, kept evergreen year-round so it tracks every leg of the current touring chapter as routing rolls out from amphitheaters into arenas and back again.
About Cole Swindell
Colden Rainey Swindell was born June 30, 1983 in Glennville, Georgia and raised in Bronwood, a farming pocket of Terrell County in the southwest corner of the state. He played football and baseball through high school, picked up the guitar at fifteen, and enrolled at Georgia Southern University in Statesboro on a partial scholarship, where he joined the Sigma Chi fraternity and ran into a fellow brother named Luke Bryan who was then a year-round bandleader playing nightclubs around the South. The connection turned into a job after graduation: Swindell signed on as Bryan's merchandise manager and rode the bus through the back end of the 2000s and the early 2010s, selling T-shirts at the merch table, opening unannounced acoustic sets when Bryan let him, and writing songs in hotel rooms between markets. The first major-label cut came in 2011 — Craig Campbell's "Outta My Head" — followed quickly by Thomas Rhett's "Get Me Some of That", Florida Georgia Line's "This Is How We Roll" co-write, Scotty McCreery's "Water Tower Town" and a full songwriter publishing deal at Sony/ATV Nashville.
The pivot from songwriter to artist came at the end of 2013. Swindell self-released "Chillin' It" as an independent single while still under publishing contract, the track caught on at country radio without label muscle behind it, and Warner Music Nashville signed him to a recording deal once "Chillin' It" was already a top-five hit. The self-titled debut album dropped in February 2014, went platinum inside a year, and produced three No. 1 Country Airplay singles back-to-back-to-back — "Chillin' It", "Hope You Get Lonely Tonight" and "Ain't Worth the Whiskey" — making Swindell the first solo artist in Country Airplay history to score three No. 1s from a debut album. You Should Be Here arrived in May 2016, anchored by the title track he wrote about his father Keith Swindell who had died unexpectedly in 2013; the single spent four weeks at No. 1 and won Single of the Year and Song of the Year nods across the CMA and ACM circuits. All of It followed in 2018 with "Break Up in the End" (a No. 1, ACM Song of the Year), "Love You Too Late" and "Single Saturday Night". Stereotype came in April 2022 and produced "Never Say Never" with Lainey Wilson and "She Had Me at Heads Carolina" — the latter a six-week No. 1 built on a Jo Dee Messina interpolation that turned into the most-streamed country song of the year for Swindell. Stereotype Broken, a 2023 deluxe expansion, added "Drinkaby" and kept the touring catalogue current. Across the run he's scored eleven No. 1s on Country Airplay, won the ACM New Artist of the Year, picked up CMT and Billboard awards, and built a touring operation that scales from honky-tonk to amphitheater to arena without losing the bar-band core of the show.
Cole Swindell tour dates
The current Cole Swindell touring chapter scales between three configurations: headline amphitheater dates anchored around the Stereotype and Down to Earth touring brands, arena co-bills with Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean and Kane Brown on package tours that route the bigger Friday and Saturday markets, and festival main-stage slots at Stagecoach in Indio, Faster Horses in Michigan, Country Thunder across the western circuit, Watershed at the Gorge in Washington, CMA Fest at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, and the Tortuga Music Festival in Fort Lauderdale. Headline amphitheater rooms include Ameris Bank Amphitheatre in Alpharetta, PNC Music Pavilion in Charlotte, Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre outside Chicago and St. Louis, Jiffy Lube Live in Bristow, Walmart AMP in Rogers, Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion outside Houston and Saratoga Performing Arts Center in upstate New York. Sets run a tight 75 to 90 minutes on a headline date with a four-to-five-piece road band, the catalogue stacked front to back so every chorus is a singalong and the stage lighting leans into red-white-and-blue washes and warm tungsten rather than full LED video walls. Support acts rotate by leg and lean heavily on the rising country class — Dylan Scott, Ashley Cooke, Travis Denning, Hailey Whitters, Restless Road, Tucker Wetmore and Tigirlily Gold have all opened recent Swindell legs. 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 Swindell at 8:45 to 9:00. Production is deliberately middleweight — a runway thrust into the pit on some legs, hand-held cameras feeding the side screens, no pyrotechnics or full video-wall theatrics — built so the songs and the band carry the room. The grid above pulls the live schedule directly from Ticketmaster and updates as new Cole Swindell dates are confirmed and added.
Cole Swindell tickets
Cole Swindell 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 a headline date typically opens with reserved-pavilion seats in the $50–$110 range, lawn pricing at $25–$50, and front-of-stage pit or premium pavilion seats climbing into the $150–$300 zone. Arena dates on co-bill packages run higher because the bill is shared — lower-bowl reserved seats $90–$220, upper-bowl $40–$80, and floor pit or VIP packages past $400 when the headline is Luke Bryan or Jason Aldean and Swindell is the direct support. Fan club presales through the official Cole Swindell site usually open the Tuesday or Wednesday before the Friday public on-sale and remain the best path to good seats on high-demand markets like Atlanta, Nashville, Dallas and Charlotte. Citi cardmember and venue presales fill the rest of the week. Dynamic pricing is in play on most 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 25 to 35 percent drop on lawn and reserved-pavilion pairs. Always buy from a marketplace with a buyer guarantee.
Cole Swindell setlist
A current Cole Swindell setlist runs roughly seventeen to twenty songs across 75 to 90 minutes on a headline date with the band tight and the pacing built around the singalongs. The night usually opens with an up-tempo cut — "Single Saturday Night" or "Down Home" — to set the bar-band tone, then settles into a mid-set radio run that pulls in "Ain't Worth the Whiskey", "Hope You Get Lonely Tonight", "Chillin' It" and "Flatliner". The Jo Dee Messina interpolation "She Had Me at Heads Carolina" lands roughly two-thirds of the way through and turns into a full singalong with the chorus held over the band; on legs where Lainey Wilson is on the bill she walks out for "Never Say Never" as a duet. "Break Up in the End" and "Love You Too Late" anchor the back half, with the slower "You Should Be Here" tucked in as the emotional pivot — Swindell wrote it for his late father and typically performs it with a single spotlight, the audience holding phone lights up, the band dropped back to acoustic guitar and piano. "Drinkaby" or "Stay Downtown" closes the main set and a one-song encore — usually a cover of a country radio classic or his own "Middle of a Memory" — wraps the night. Check setlist.fm after the first night of any new tour 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 adopted-home show. Swindell has lived and written in Music City since the late 2000s, and his Nashville dates carry the weight of a hometown showcase. Amphitheater swings route through Ascend Amphitheater on the riverfront, a roughly 6,800-cap room downtown with a skyline view across the Cumberland; arena and co-bill legs play Bridgestone Arena, the 19,000-cap home of the Predators at the foot of Lower Broadway. Songwriter peers fill the front rows; surprise guest walk-ons from Luke Bryan, Thomas Rhett, Lainey Wilson, Jordan Davis or HARDY are part of the running tradition when those artists are in town. The post-show bar crawl is built into the walk back to your hotel on Lower Broadway. 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.
Atlanta
Atlanta is one of Swindell's strongest markets — the closest major market to his Bronwood, Georgia hometown — and his Georgia dates typically play Ameris Bank Amphitheatre in Alpharetta on amphitheater swings 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. Georgia crowds turn the "You Should Be Here" singalong into the loudest moment on the tour — the hometown emotional weight of the song lands differently in front of a Georgia audience. Lawn at Ameris Bank is the value seat; the pavilion is worth the upgrade.
Dallas
Dallas-Fort Worth is a flagship Texas market for Swindell, with tour stops splitting between Dos Equis Pavilion in Fair Park, the larger American Airlines Center downtown on arena swings, and Globe Life Field or Choctaw Stadium in Arlington for stadium co-bills with Bryan or Aldean. 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 "She Had Me at Heads Carolina" and "Ain't Worth the Whiskey" into full-volume room-shakers. DART rail drops at Victory Station a two-minute walk from American Airlines Center.
Charlotte
Charlotte is a reliable Southeast tour stop for Swindell — PNC Music Pavilion in the northeastern suburbs is the usual amphitheater play, a 19,000-cap reserved-plus-lawn venue off University City Boulevard. The Charlotte crowd skews young-country-radio loyal, and the singalong on "Single Saturday Night" runs full-volume into the lawn. PNC Music Pavilion is car-only from the city; budget 45 to 75 minutes of post-show parking-lot drain on a sold-out night. Spectrum Center in uptown Charlotte hosts arena dates on co-bill legs, a 19,000-cap NBA building easily accessible from the Lynx Blue Line. Lower-pavilion tickets at PNC sell first; the upper-pavilion reserved holds the best price-to-view ratio.
Houston
Houston gets a Swindell amphitheater date at Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion in The Woodlands on most North American legs — a 16,000-cap venue thirty miles north of downtown with a serious lawn and a covered orchestra pit. He also plays NRG Stadium during the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo when the calendar aligns, a 72,000-cap event held annually each spring that draws country headliners on a rotating slate. The Houston crowd is one of the loudest on the tour for "Chillin' It" and "Flatliner". Cynthia Woods is car-only from the city; budget 60 to 90 minutes of post-show drain in The Woodlands traffic. NRG Stadium is light-rail accessible from downtown Houston via the METRORail Red Line. Lawn at Cynthia Woods is the value seat; the orchestra pit is the premium tier.
Chicago
Chicago gets a Swindell amphitheater date at Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre in Tinley Park on most North American legs — a 28,000-cap reserved-plus-lawn venue forty miles southwest of downtown — and arena swings route through the United Center, the 23,500-cap West Side building that hosts the Bulls and Blackhawks. The Chicago country crowd is bigger than the coastal music-press version of the city suggests, and the singalong on "Break Up in the End" runs deep into the upper bowl. CTA Green Line to Ashland or a rideshare into the lots around the United Center 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.
Washington
Washington-area Swindell dates route through Jiffy Lube Live in Bristow, Virginia — a 25,000-cap amphitheater forty miles southwest of D.C. off I-66 — on amphitheater swings, and Capital One Arena downtown on arena co-bill legs. Jiffy Lube Live is car-only from D.C.; the I-66 stretch back into the District clogs hard on a sold-out night, so budget the drive both ways. Capital One Arena is Metro-accessible from the Gallery Place-Chinatown station on the Red, Green and Yellow lines, which is the easy play on a sold-out night. D.C.-area country crowds skew the broadest of any tour stop — military families from Quantico, Fort Belvoir and Andrews fill the lawn at Jiffy Lube Live, and "You Should Be Here" plays to a deep singalong from a room with strong personal connection to the lyric. Lawn at Jiffy Lube Live is the value seat.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles country dates for Swindell typically route through the Stagecoach Festival in Indio each spring — the three-day country festival on the Empire Polo Club grounds — and YouTube Theater or the Honda Center in Anaheim on tour legs that swing through Southern California. Stagecoach plays a main-stage slot in front of 75,000 across the polo grounds with the Coachella infrastructure built up for the country weekend; Swindell's set lands in the late-afternoon-to-sundown window on the schedule. YouTube Theater at SoFi Stadium and the Honda Center are the easier indoor plays for arena-scale shows. LA country crowds run pop-country broad — Swindell's Southern California audience came in heavy through "She Had Me at Heads Carolina" on streaming — and the Heads Carolina chorus is one of the loudest singalongs of the West Coast leg. Stagecoach GA tickets cover all three days; single-day passes are not sold separately.
Cheapest Cole Swindell Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Cole Swindell 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 Cole Swindell 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 $57 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 Cole Swindell tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
Cole SwindellVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Cole Swindell VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Cole Swindellconcerts 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 Cole SwindellVIP & meet and greet guide.
Cole SwindellPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Cole Swindell 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 Cole Swindelltour 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 Cole Swindell presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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