
Zach Bryan Denver Concert — Aug 14, 2026 at Empower Field at Mile High
Zach Bryan is confirmed to perform in Denver on Fri, August 14, 2026 at Empower Field at Mile High. This is Zach Bryan's only currently scheduled Denver date on the 2026 tour, so seats tend to move quickly — especially floor and lower-bowl sections. Live Ticketmaster availability is shown below and refreshes daily.
Zach Bryan Denver Concert Details
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Zach Bryan
Zach Bryan Denver Ticket Prices
Live pricing from Ticketmaster for the Zach Bryan Denver show. Resale prices on secondary markets may be higher.
About the Venue — Empower Field at Mile High
The Zach Bryan Denver show takes place at Empower Field at Mile High (1701 Bryant St.). Plan to arrive 45 to 60 minutes before doors — lines and bag checks can stretch for big tour stops like this. Rideshare is typically the easiest way to arrive and leave on a show night. For paid parking, venue lots and nearby garages tend to fill 60 to 90 minutes before showtime.
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About Zach Bryan
Zach Bryan's biography reads less like a label development plan and more like the long way around to a stadium tour. Born in Okinawa to parents stationed there with the US Navy, he was raised in Oologah, Oklahoma — a town of around 1,200 people north of Tulsa — and enlisted in the Navy himself out of high school, eventually serving eight years and reaching the rank of Petty Officer Third Class. He wrote songs on whatever base he was stationed at, from Washington State to Florida, and started uploading rough acoustic videos to YouTube in 2017 — single-take performances filmed on a phone, often outdoors, with no production beyond whatever the wind did to the microphone. The early uploads built slowly. Heading South, recorded on a friend's farm in 2019 and posted as a YouTube video, was the song that broke containment: a four-minute hammer of a chorus that pulled millions of views and put him on Nashville's radar without him ever moving there. He released DeAnn (2019), named for his late mother, and Elisabeth (2020) independently while still on active duty, then secured an honourable discharge in 2021 and signed with Warner Records on the back of a bidding war he ran on his own terms — keeping ownership of the songs and creative control of every release. His major-label debut, American Heartbreak (2022), was a 34-track triple album — Something in the Orange, Highway Boys, From Austin, Sun to Me — that critics initially treated as bloated and audiences treated as scripture; it ended the year as one of the most-streamed country records of all time. The self-titled Zach Bryan (2023) and The Great American Bar Scene (2024) followed at roughly twelve-month intervals, both debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, and I Remember Everything with Kacey Musgraves became his first No. 1 Hot 100 single. Across that run, managed by Belden Smith, Bryan refused most of the standard country-radio infrastructure, declined to chase singles, and built his audience song-by-song through streaming and a touring schedule that escalated from theatres to amphitheatres to stadiums in less than three years. By 2024 he was the rare artist who could fill MetLife Stadium and Soldier Field on a hard $99 ceiling — the central thesis of his published letter to the live-music industry, and the reason his tours have become a case study in what a non-dynamic, non-scalped ticket market looks like when the headliner actively defends it.
