
Morgan Wallen is officially deep into his 2026 Still The Problem Tour, and if the early run is any indication, this thing is already a full-blown stadium takeover.
He kicked things off with two straight nights at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, setting the tone for a 23-show run built around huge venues, big moments, and the kind of fan turnout only Wallen can pull.
A portion of every ticket sold goes to the Morgan Wallen Foundation, which supports youth programs in sports and music, so the tour is also giving back while it packs arenas and stadiums coast to coast. The tour’s format has been a major part of the appeal: two-night stops in most cities, college football stadium energy, and a rotating slate of openers that keeps every date feeling a little different.
Brooks & Dunn, HARDY, Ella Langley, and Thomas Rhett have all been part of the mix, giving the shows extra star power and making each stop feel like its own event rather than just another night on the calendar. That’s part of why the tour has been hitting so hard: it’s big, loud, and built for maximum crowd reaction.
Wallen’s walkout tradition has only made the run even more fun for fans. So far, he’s brought out names like Jared Allen, Peyton Manning, Nick Saban, plus Jack Eichel and Noah Hanifin in Las Vegas, giving every city its own “did that really just happen?” moment. It’s become one of those things that makes his shows feel bigger than a concert, more like a local sports-and-music event rolled into one.

He also gave fans something else to obsess over while in Las Vegas: new music. During the show, Morgan said, “On my week off, I was in the studio recording about ten new songs, so I’m working on new music. I’ll get that out pretty soon.” That alone is enough to keep fans locked in for whatever comes next, especially with the tour still rolling and the studio clearly in the picture.
And then there’s the part that really seals the deal… the guy stays. After performing for more than 2.5 hours, Morgan reportedly stuck around for another 45 minutes, signing autographs and taking photos from the stage, which is the kind of move that says a lot about how he treats the people who show up for him.
For an artist already running one of the biggest tours of the year, that’s the kind of extra mile that turns a big night into a memorable one. With Indianapolis, Gainesville, Denver, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Clemson, Baltimore, and Ann Arbor still ahead before the tour wraps at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on July 31st and August 1st, Wallen’s summer is very much in full swing.


