
Jordan Davis Tour 2026
Next Jordan Davis Shows
The 8 closest dates from the live Ticketmaster feed.


Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis

Jordan Davis
Jordan Davis Tickets Near You — Shows by City
15 citiesJordan Davis is playing 15 cities this tour. Tap any city for exact dates, venue info, seat prices, and parking.
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1 showFrom $84Is Jordan Davis Coming to Your City?
1 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Jordan Davis across 12 of the biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
15 upcoming Jordan Davis concerts across 15 cities in North America, with tickets from $63 USD. Live Ticketmaster availability refreshed daily.
- When is Jordan Davis's next show?
- Sat, July 18, 2026 at High Country - Eau Claire Event District.
- How much are Jordan Davis tickets?
- $63–$815 USD, varies by city and seat section.
- Is Jordan Davis touring near me?
- Playing 15 cities in 2026. See the "Tickets Near You" section below for your city.
- How do I get Jordan Davis tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Jordan Davis 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.
Jordan Davis Ticket Prices 2026— Cheapest Seats & Average Cost
Jordan Davis ticket prices vary by city, venue size, day of week, and seat section. Live price breakdown across all 2026 tour stops:
Jordan Davis Concert FAQ
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About Jordan Davis
JJordan Davis 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. 15 confirmed dates across 15 cities this run. Tickets currently start at $63. 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 Jordan Davis
Jordan Davis is the bearded Louisiana songwriter who turned a quiet 2018 country-radio debut into one of the format's most reliable hit machines over the back half of the last decade. He arrived in Nashville from Shreveport with an LSU environmental-science degree, a publishing-deal pedigree built around his older brother Jacob Davis, and a writer's-room ear that landed him at MCA Nashville with "Singles You Up" — a steel-and-808 country single that pushed to the top of the Billboard Country Airplay chart on his first try in 2018. The debut album Home State followed and slotted him into the wave of late-2010s country acts who could comfortably swing between traditional acoustic-and-fiddle arrangements and the post-Sam-Hunt drum-loop production palette without losing the writing. The follow-up cycle leaned harder on the song. "Buy Dirt", a co-write and duet with Luke Bryan released in 2021, won Single of the Year and Song of the Year at the 2022 ACM Awards, hit No. 1 on Country Airplay and pushed Davis into the headline tier of the format. "Next Thing You Know", a single off the 2023 album Bluebird Days, followed it to No. 1 on Country Airplay and gave him a wedding-first-dance standard with the kind of multi-format crossover that country songs only manage a handful of times each decade. The touring footprint has scaled in step — from acoustic listening rooms and 1,500-cap club residencies into amphitheaters, arena-support slots and now headline theater and amphitheater runs of his own. The live show stays close to the records: a five-piece touring band, a short acoustic mid-set break that pulls in songwriter-circle story songs, a pair of co-writers' deep cuts at most stops, and a closing run anchored by the radio singles that the front of the room can sing word-for-word. Davis remains a writers'-room artist first and a stage performer second — the production is deliberately low-key and the focus is on the writing — which has aged the catalog well into the streaming era and given the headline tour a re-routable, low-overhead shape that can shift between theaters, sheds and arenas without re-designing the stage plot. 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 each new touring chapter as the routing rolls out across the U.S., Canada and the U.K. without dating itself to any one calendar year.
About Jordan Davis
Jordan Carl Wheeler Davis was born March 30, 1988 in Shreveport, Louisiana, the younger of two brothers in a family with deep country-music roots — his uncle is the songwriter Stan Paul Davis, who wrote Tracy Lawrence's "Today's Lonely Fool" and "Better Man, Better Off," and his older brother Jacob Davis is also a working Nashville country artist and songwriter. Davis grew up across northwest Louisiana, ran cross-country and played guitar through high school, and headed to Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge for a degree in environmental science with a focus on forestry. He worked briefly in that field after graduating before deciding the songs he had been writing on the side were worth a real push, and made the eight-hour drive up to Nashville in his mid-twenties to chase a publishing deal.
The Nashville build was steady rather than overnight. Davis signed a publishing arrangement, settled into the writers'-room circuit on Music Row, and worked his way toward a label deal at MCA Nashville in 2017. The first single, "Singles You Up," dropped that year and crossed onto country radio in 2018, climbing through the spring and topping the Billboard Country Airplay chart in May with a sound that married a fingerpicked acoustic-and-steel arrangement to a modern programmed-drum backbeat — a production choice that placed Davis squarely in the post-Sam-Hunt wave of country acts willing to absorb pop-and-R&B production texture without abandoning the genre's lyrical center. The full-length debut Home State followed in March 2018 and produced two further radio singles, "Take It from Me" and "Slow Dance in a Parking Lot," both of which became top-of-the-format records and confirmed that the first single wasn't a one-off. The 2020 EP Bluebird Days project and the EPs that bridged into the next album cycle kept the radio presence steady through the pandemic touring shutdown, and Davis used the off-the-road time to push deeper into the co-writing circuit — the work that would resurface as the 2021 single "Buy Dirt."
The breakthrough on the awards-circuit side came in 2021 with "Buy Dirt," a duet co-write with Luke Bryan released as the title track of a same-name EP. The song was written with Davis's brother Jacob Davis and the songwriters Matt Jenkins and Josh Jenkins, leaned on a plainspoken-advice lyric about land, family and legacy, and connected on country radio in a way few singles in the same period had. "Buy Dirt" hit No. 1 on Country Airplay, won Single of the Year and Song of the Year at the 2022 ACM Awards, was nominated for Best Country Duo/Group Performance at the 64th Grammy Awards, and re-cast Davis from a singles-chart act into a writer of substance. The 2023 full-length Bluebird Days arrived in February of that year as a sixteen-track double-EP-style record and led with "Next Thing You Know," which followed "Buy Dirt" to No. 1 on Country Airplay, broke through to streaming and pop-adjacent playlists in a way Davis's catalog hadn't before, and quickly settled into the rotation of go-to first-dance songs at country and country-adjacent weddings across North America. Subsequent singles from Bluebird Days extended the radio run and the touring footprint grew in step. He has continued to release through MCA Nashville and remains based in the Nashville area with his wife Kristen Davis and their family.
Jordan Davis tour dates
The current Jordan Davis touring footprint sits in the headline theater-and-amphitheater band with arena-support runs layered in on bigger-billed packages. Davis spent the early part of his radio career as a club and theater headliner in the 1,500-to-3,500-cap range — venues like The Joy Theater in New Orleans, Brooklyn Bowl Nashville, House of Blues rooms, the Wiltern in Los Angeles, the Vic Theatre in Chicago — and stepped up into amphitheater headline slots once "Buy Dirt" and "Next Thing You Know" turned the live demand into something that needed bigger buildings. The headline routing now mixes theaters, sheds and outdoor amphitheaters across the U.S. — Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, Coca-Cola Roxy in Atlanta, Stage AE in Pittsburgh, FivePoint Amphitheatre in Irvine, Red Hat Amphitheater in Raleigh, Ascend Amphitheater on the Nashville riverfront — with arena support and special-guest billing on Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney and Thomas Rhett tours filling the bigger-room appearances. Canadian dates have run through theaters and clubs in Toronto, Calgary and Edmonton, with a U.K. presence built around the C2C Country to Country festival weekend in London and headline club shows in Glasgow, Manchester and Dublin. Sets run a tight 75 to 90 minutes with a five-piece touring band, a brief acoustic mid-set break that pulls from the writers'-room catalog, and a closing run anchored by the radio singles. Stage production is straightforward — back-line risers, a video screen behind the kit on the larger amphitheater dates, no choreography, no pyrotechnics — and the focus stays on the songs and the band. Door times typically run 6:00 to 6:30 p.m. for theater dates and 5:30 to 6:00 p.m. for amphitheaters, with the opener on around 7:30 and Davis at 8:45 to 9:00 on most nights. The grid above pulls the live schedule directly from Ticketmaster and updates as new headline dates, festival slots and special-guest appearances are confirmed and added across the rolling routing calendar.
Jordan Davis tickets
Jordan Davis 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. Headline theater pricing for a Davis date typically opens with reserved seating in the $45–$85 range and front-of-stage pit or premium reserved at $100–$175, with VIP packages that add a pre-show acoustic experience, an early-entry merch shopping window and a signed lithograph landing in the $200–$350 zone depending on the market. Amphitheater dates run wider — lawn at $30–$55, reserved pavilion at $60–$120, premium pavilion and pit seats up to $200 — with the major-market shows in Nashville, Dallas and Atlanta carrying the heaviest price ladder. Arena-support and special-guest dates use the headliner's pricing structure; on Luke Bryan or Kenny Chesney stadium-and-amphitheater runs that means lawn at $30–$60, reserved seats $80–$200 and premium pit pricing into the $300–$500 zone. Fan-club presales through the official Jordan Davis site typically open the Tuesday or Wednesday before the Friday public on-sale and remain the best path to the front sections in higher-demand markets like Nashville, Dallas, Atlanta and the Northeast U.S. Citi cardmember and venue presales fill the rest of the week. Ticketmaster Verified Fan registration has been used on select on-sales — typically the higher-demand Nashville and major-market dates — 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. Dynamic pricing applies on most on-sales, so face value can move during the queue — refresh the secondary market in the final week before showtime on non-major-market theater dates and you'll often catch a 15 to 25 percent drop on reserved pairs. Mobile entry through the Ticketmaster app is now the default at most venues on the routing; print-at-home and box-office will-call are still available on request at smaller theater dates. Always buy from a marketplace with a buyer guarantee and avoid private resale on social media or classifieds, where ticket fraud on country-tour dates has been a recurring problem since the post-pandemic touring rebound.
Jordan Davis setlist
A current Jordan Davis setlist runs roughly seventeen to twenty songs across 75 to 90 minutes, with the band loose and the pacing built around the radio singles and a short acoustic mid-set break. The night typically opens with a driving uptempo from the recent record before settling into the back catalog — "Take It from Me" and "Slow Dance in a Parking Lot" land early, "Almost Maybes" and "Tucson Too Late" anchor the mid-set, and the acoustic-stool segment usually pulls in a Home State deep cut, a writers'-round-style story-song and a cover or tribute to a Louisiana or Nashville influence. "Singles You Up," the 2018 debut single, lands two-thirds of the way through and gets the loudest singalong of the night in the older-skewing rooms. The closing run is anchored by "Next Thing You Know" — the 2023 No. 1 has become the wedding-first-dance moment that produces the loudest crowd-voice section of the show — and "Buy Dirt," which Davis performs with a tour-band stand-in on the Luke Bryan duet vocal unless he's on a co-bill where Bryan steps out for the song. Encore handling varies by leg — some nights Davis closes cold on "Buy Dirt" without leaving the stage, other nights the band steps off briefly before returning for a one-or-two-song encore anchored by "Singles You Up" or a newer single. Check setlist.fm after the first night of any new headline leg for the current run order; fan submissions usually post within a couple of hours of last call and stay reliable across the duration of a touring leg.
Tour cities
Nashville
Nashville is the home-room show. Davis has lived and written in Music City since the mid-2010s, and his Nashville dates carry the weight of an industry showcase as much as a hometown homecoming. The Ryman Auditorium downtown — the 2,362-seat former Mother Church of Country Music — is the marquee Davis headline play in the city, and amphitheater swings route through Ascend Amphitheater on the riverfront when the bill calls for a bigger building. Fellow songwriters fill the front rows and surprise guest walk-ons from co-writers and Music Row peers are part of the running tradition; the "Buy Dirt" performance is the obvious candidate for a Luke Bryan or co-writer cameo when Bryan happens to be in town. The Ryman's pew seating runs front-to-back so sightlines are excellent throughout; the easier downtown play is a Lyft into the SoBro arts district and a five-minute walk in. Floor and lower-pew tickets sell first on the on-sale.
Shreveport
Shreveport is the literal hometown — Davis was born here in March 1988 — and a return date in northwest Louisiana pulls fans from across the Ark-La-Tex region, including East Texas and southern Arkansas. The Brookshire Grocery Arena out in Bossier City and the smaller Municipal Auditorium and Strand Theatre downtown are the standard rooms, depending on whether the date is a headline arena play or a more intimate theater-residency feel. The crowd skews deep-loyal and family-mixed — this is the room where the "Singles You Up" and "Take It from Me" singalongs run loudest because the songs have been radio fixtures in the market since they came out. Bossier City parking is straightforward and free; the downtown Shreveport theaters are walkable from the riverside hotels. Lower-bowl seats at the arena and orchestra-level seats at the theaters go first on the on-sale.
Dallas
Dallas-Fort Worth is one of Davis's strongest non-Nashville markets, with headline dates routing through The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory in Irvine, the Texas Trust CU Theatre at Grand Prairie and the larger Dos Equis Pavilion in Fair Park depending on the leg and the co-bill. Toyota Music Factory holds roughly 8,000 across reserved seating and lawn, sits in the Las Colinas entertainment district between the airport and downtown, and is the most comfortable summer play in the metro thanks to the open-air-but-covered design that keeps the sun off the pavilion. Texas crowds turn the "Slow Dance in a Parking Lot" and "Buy Dirt" singalongs into full-volume room-shakers — Davis's writing leans heavily on the rural-and-suburban-Texas storytelling vocabulary that the audience here recognizes word-for-word. DART rail and rideshare from downtown Dallas drop close to the Toyota Music Factory complex; on Dos Equis nights the better play is rideshare into Fair Park to skip the post-show parking-lot drain.
Atlanta
Atlanta is the flagship Southeast date and Davis typically plays Coca-Cola Roxy in The Battery next to Truist Park, the 3,600-cap multi-format theater that handles the headline footprint cleanly, or steps up to Cadence Bank Amphitheatre at Chastain or Ameris Bank Amphitheatre in Alpharetta when the bill scales out. Coca-Cola Roxy is one of the easier Atlanta-area concert nights for parking and access — the surrounding Battery complex has restaurants, garages and rideshare drop-points built into the foot traffic flow on Braves game days. The Atlanta crowd turns out for the songwriter material as loudly as the radio singles; the acoustic mid-set break runs longer here than at most other tour stops. MARTA does not reach Truist Park directly; rideshare or driving in via I-285 and I-75 are the practical plays. Floor and lower-balcony seats at Coca-Cola Roxy are the value tier on the on-sale.
Toronto
Toronto is the marquee Canadian stop for Davis when a North American leg routes through Ontario, with headline plays through theaters like History on Queen East and HISTORY-tier rooms in the 2,500-cap range, and arena-support slots at Scotiabank Arena when he is opening on a Luke Bryan, Thomas Rhett or Kenny Chesney bill. The Canadian country crowd skews loyal and detail-oriented; the "Buy Dirt" and "Next Thing You Know" singalongs run as loudly here as in any U.S. market because both songs were significant on Canadian country radio. TTC streetcar service down Queen East and GO Transit through Union Station both drop within a short walk of History; on Scotiabank Arena nights the SkyWalk from Union Station gets you inside the gates in five minutes. Lower-bowl and floor tickets sell first on the on-sale. The Boots and Hearts Music Festival routing in Ontario through August occasionally pulls Davis onto the U.S.-Canada border circuit as a festival slot rather than a standalone Toronto night, which is the alternate play if a city-only date doesn't materialize on a given cycle. The standalone Toronto dates remain the best value play in the Canadian market because the rooms are sized to demand without the festival markup.
Chicago
Chicago gets a Jordan Davis headline date at the Vic Theatre in Lakeview, the Riviera Theatre in Uptown or the larger Aragon Ballroom on most North American legs, and an amphitheater play at Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre out in Tinley Park or Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre when the bill calls for an outdoor shed. The Chicago country audience is larger than the coastal-music-press version of the city would suggest — country radio in the metro is strong and the post-COVID surge in country touring filled the major Chicago-area sheds on every recent cycle. CTA Red Line to Belmont gets you to the Vic Theatre, and the Brown Line to Lawrence drops at the Aragon and the Riviera. 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. The Chicago theater rooms favor the acoustic mid-set break — the seated, attentive crowd at the Vic and Riviera lets the storytelling portion of the show breathe in a way the louder amphitheater sheds don't, which is the practical case for choosing a theater date over the suburban shed when both are on the routing.
New York
New York gets a Jordan Davis date at Irving Plaza in Union Square, Webster Hall in the East Village or the larger Beacon Theatre on the Upper West Side depending on the cycle, with Madison Square Garden appearances reserved for the arena-support slots on Luke Bryan or Kenny Chesney tour packages. Irving Plaza and Webster Hall are general-admission floor rooms with limited balcony reserved seating, which is the practical play for fans who want the front-of-stage experience; the Beacon is a hard-ticketed reserved-seating room and the better choice on a date-night night out. The New York country crowd skews more eclectic than the Southeast markets — Davis's wedding-song crossover on "Next Thing You Know" pulled a chunk of the audience that came in through Spotify rather than country radio, and the audience here treats the acoustic mid-set break as the marquee moment rather than the radio singles. Any subway, NJ Transit, LIRR or PATH connection drops within a few blocks of every venue on the rotation, which makes a New York Davis date one of the easier transit nights on the entire tour calendar. Limited balcony reserved seating at Irving Plaza and Webster Hall sells first on the on-sale; the Beacon Theatre orchestra is the value tier when he plays the Upper West Side.
London
London is the U.K. flagship and Davis's appearances in the city run through the Country to Country (C2C) festival weekend at The O2 in March each year and headline club shows at venues like O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire and Indigo at The O2 when he routes a standalone U.K. run. C2C is a three-day country-music festival on the O2 arena complex with main-stage slots inside The O2 arena and side-stage and Indigo programming across the weekend; Davis has played the C2C bill in past cycles and remains a regular fixture on the U.K. country circuit. The Jubilee line drops directly at North Greenwich for The O2 site, which is the cleanest concert arrival in central London. The U.K. country crowd is detail-oriented and song-led; the acoustic mid-set break runs longer at C2C and the Shepherd's Bush dates than at the U.S. amphitheater shows. "Buy Dirt" and "Next Thing You Know" both crossed onto BBC Radio 2 and U.K. country radio meaningfully, so the singalong on those tracks is full-throated here in a way that surprises first-time visitors from the U.S. circuit. Standing-floor tickets at Shepherd's Bush and the Indigo go first on the on-sale; the balcony reserved seating is the value tier and the better play for a comfortable night.
Cheapest Jordan Davis Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Jordan Davis 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 Jordan Davis 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 $63 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 Jordan Davis tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
Jordan DavisVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Jordan Davis VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Jordan Davisconcerts 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 Jordan DavisVIP & meet and greet guide.
Jordan DavisPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Jordan Davis 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 Jordan Davistour 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 Jordan Davis presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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