
Parker McCollum Setlist 2026 — Songs, Order & Running Time
Catch the Parker McCollum Setlist Live
Hear the tour setlist in person — upcoming dates with live Ticketmaster availability.


Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum

Parker McCollum
Parker McCollum 2026 Tour Setlist Structure
Parker McCollum, the American country act, currently has 36 confirmed live dates — the most recent routing points at The Wharf Amphitheater in Orange Beach, so the song order below reflects how country headline sets of this size are typically paced.
Recent Parker McCollum concerts have averaged between 18 and 24 songs spread across roughly 90 to 120 minutes of performance time (excluding opener). The shows typically follow this rough structure:
- Opener (song 1 to 2). A high-energy hit to set the tone.
- Hit block (song 3 to 7). A run of the most-streamed singles.
- Acoustic / storytelling moment (song 8 to 10). Stripped-back arrangements and banter.
- Deep-cut set (song 11 to 15). Fan favorites and newer album tracks.
- Peak run (song 16 to 20). The dancefloor anthems and biggest singalongs.
- Encore (song 21 to 24). A 2 to 3 song encore featuring the signature closer.
Does the Parker McCollum Setlist Change Night to Night?
The core of the Parker McCollum 2026 setlist — the singles and the staging — stays consistent across the tour so production cues work from night to night. Smaller changes (a deep cut swap, a city-specific cover, or an acoustic surprise) happen on some nights. For the exact setlist from a specific Parker McCollum show, check fan-submitted setlists on Setlist.fm after the concert.
Parker McCollum Setlist — FAQ
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About Parker McCollum
Parker Yancey McCollum was born June 15, 1992 in Conroe, Texas — a working-class town an hour north of Houston where his grandfather had been a regional country songwriter and his older brother Tyler had played in the family band before him. He took up guitar in his early teens, started writing songs as a high-school freshman, and by the time he enrolled at the University of Texas in Austin in 2010 he was already gigging the campus bars and the Sixth Street circuit on weekends. He dropped out before finishing the degree, kept the Austin base, and self-released The Limestone Kid in 2015 — a debut record cut on a shoestring with a tight Texas band, ten songs deep, that became a quiet streaming success on the regional Texas country circuit and earned him a permanent spot on the Greune Hall and Billy Bob's Texas rotation. Probably Wrong followed in 2017, a sprawling double-EP-into-album that pushed harder on the Townes Van Zandt and Steve Earle songwriter end of the catalogue. The two records together did what they needed to do: built a touring base across Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana and into Tennessee that could fill rooms of 1,500 to 3,000 night after night without national radio or label support.
The MCA Nashville signing came in 2019 and the Hollywood Gold EP landed in August 2020 — six songs anchored by "Pretty Heart", which McCollum had been performing live for the better part of two years before it was tracked. The song hit No. 1 on Billboard's Country Airplay chart in February 2021 and went multi-platinum, instantly moving McCollum from regional Texas headliner to national format priority. Gold Chain Cowboy followed in July 2021 with the No. 1 single "To Be Loved by You" and the deeper-cut "Rest of My Life", and Never Enough arrived in May 2023 — the third studio album, his first to debut at the top of Billboard's country chart, anchored by the title track and the country-radio hit "Burn It Down". The ACM Awards named him New Male Artist of the Year in March 2022 and the CMA Awards followed with multiple New Artist of the Year nominations across the same cycle. The catalogue now runs three studio albums, the Hollywood Gold EP, more than half a dozen No. 1 or top-five country singles, and a touring schedule that fills weekend-arena buildings and summer amphitheaters across the country.
The production approach across the MCA records has stayed remarkably consistent: McCollum co-produces with Jon Randall, the veteran Nashville songwriter and producer who built his reputation cutting Miranda Lambert and Dierks Bentley records and brought the same room-sound, band-first philosophy to Hollywood Gold, Gold Chain Cowboy and Never Enough. The records are tracked live in the room with the road band rather than assembled from session players, which is why the studio versions of "Pretty Heart" and "Handle on You" sound the way they do live — there is no orchestral pad or programmed loop to fall away when the stage cut starts. The songwriting credits across the three records lean heavy on McCollum himself, with frequent co-writes from Randall, Rhett Akins, Tony Lane and Texas-circuit collaborator Monty Criswell. The catalogue strategy — radio-format hooks delivered through a Texas dance-hall band, with the deep cuts kept honest to the Probably Wrong songwriter material — has been the formula that separates McCollum from the broader mid-2020s country class. His peers on the format charts have largely chased the bro-country or country-pop crossover lane; McCollum has stayed inside the lineage that runs from Townes Van Zandt and Steve Earle through Robert Earl Keen, Cody Canada and Wade Bowen into the present day, and the audience has rewarded the consistency.
