
Cole Swindell Seat Map 2026 — Floor, Bowl, VIP & Best Seats
Cole Swindell Dates With Live Seat Maps
Open a date to compare the official Ticketmaster map, floor layout, and current prices.


Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell with Clay Walker and Tucket Wetmore

Cole Swindell

Cole Swindell
Best Seats for Cole Swindell
Cole Swindell, the American country act, currently has 11 confirmed live dates across 11 cities — the most recent routing points at The Sandbar at Red Rocks Casino in Las Vegas, and the seat layout you see at checkout depends on whether that specific room is configured for an arena, theatre, or festival country set.
The best Cole Swindell seats depend on whether you want proximity, production view, or value. Lower-bowl seats facing the stage are usually the safest all-around choice. Floor and pit tickets get you closest, but sightlines depend on crowd height and stage layout. Upper-level center sections are the best value when prices are high.
Cole Swindell Seat Types Explained
- Pit / GA floor: closest energy, standing-room, arrive early for position.
- Reserved floor: close view with assigned seats, often premium priced.
- Lower bowl: best balance of view, sound, and price.
- Upper level: cheapest broad-stage view, good for big production tours.
- Side view: can be a bargain unless marked obstructed or behind-stage.
- VIP / platinum: premium seat location or package benefits; read inclusions carefully.
How to Read the Ticketmaster Seat Map
Open the official Cole Swindell listing, switch to map view, and compare section angle before price. Blue usually means standard tickets, pink or resale-style labels can mean verified resale, and platinum labels are dynamically priced premium seats. Check the stage icon carefully before buying side or rear sections.
Cole Swindell Seat Map — FAQ
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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.