Old Dominion Merch 2026 — Tour Shirts, Prices & Booth Tips
Old Dominion Tour Merch Prices
Old Dominion, the American country act, has no confirmed dates on sale right now, and merch tables, currency, and city-exclusive prints change from stop to stop on a country tour of this scale.
Official Old Dominion merch prices vary by venue and currency, but most arena tours follow a familiar range: shirts around $40-$55 USD, hoodies around $80-$110, hats around $35-$50, posters around $25-$45, and limited city-specific items above that. If the next show is at a major arena, expect card-only checkout at most stands and longer lines after the opener finishes.
Best Time to Buy Old Dominion Merch
- Before the opener: best size selection, longest pre-show line.
- During the opener: shorter line, but you may miss part of the support set.
- During the encore: fastest exit strategy, weaker size selection.
- After the show: convenient, but popular sizes and city posters may be gone.
How to Avoid Fake Old Dominion Merch
Buy inside the venue or through Old Dominion's official store. Street vendors outside the arena often sell unlicensed shirts with low-quality prints, misspelled dates, or old tour art. Official merch usually has cleaner print registration, proper neck tags, and pricing posted on the booth signage.
Old Dominion Merch — FAQ
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About Old Dominion
Old Dominion came together in Nashville around 2007 out of a circle of songwriters who had moved to Music Row from elsewhere — Matthew Ramsey and Trevor Rosen from Roanoke, Virginia, where the original Old Dominion name had been kicking around an earlier college band; Brad Tursi from Connecticut by way of the University of Virginia; Geoff Sprung from the Washington DC area; Whit Sellers from suburban Atlanta. The early years ran on the parallel-track economics that have always defined Music Row: each member was holding a publishing deal or chasing one, writing for the major-label cut lists by day and gigging the Lower Broadway honky-tonks and East Nashville rooms by night under the Old Dominion banner. Tursi, Rosen and Ramsey in particular built deep co-write credits in that window — Tursi co-wrote "Sangria" for Blake Shelton, Rosen co-wrote "We Were Us" for Keith Urban with Miranda Lambert, Ramsey co-wrote singles for the Band Perry and Craig Morgan. By the time RCA Records Nashville signed the band as a recording act in the mid 2010s, the songwriting catalogue was already deep and the live set had been road-tested through several years of independent EPs.
The 2015 debut LP Meat and Candy on RCA Nashville was the formal arrival, anchored by "Break Up with Him" — a snare-driven, hooky kiss-off built around a phone-call narrative — which climbed to No. 1 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart and broke the band out of the support-act circuit. Follow-up singles "Snapback", "Song for Another Time" and "Nowhere Fast" all reached No. 1, an unusual streak for a debut country record. Happy Endings followed in 2017 with the No. 1 "No Such Thing as a Broken Heart" and the standout "Hotel Key", earned the band a Grammy nomination for Best Country Album and consolidated the radio dominance. The self-titled 2019 third LP Old Dominion added "One Man Band" and "Some People Do", both No. 1 country radio hits, and won the ACM Album of the Year trophy. Time, Tequila & Therapy in 2021 was a pandemic-era record assembled remotely and in tight studio bursts, anchored by "I Was on a Boat That Day" with Blake Shelton-style swagger and "Memory Lane" — which retroactively named the 2023 fifth LP Memory Lane, the band's most ambitious record to date and the one that pushed the touring routing into bigger amphitheaters and headline arenas. Multiple ACM and CMA Vocal Group of the Year wins across the second half of the 2010s and into the 2020s have made Old Dominion the default answer to that category, in the same way Rascal Flatts owned it for the decade before. The RCA Nashville home base has never wavered.
