Country music history is preparing to move from Nissan Stadium into living rooms across America, as Alan Jackson’s final concert is set to become a primetime television event on NBC. For millions of fans who cannot be in Nashville on June 27, 2026, the special will offer something deeply meaningful: one last chance to watch a true country legend take his final bow. Alan’s official website confirms that NBC will air “Alan Jackson: The Last Show,” a primetime television event filmed before a sold-out crowd at Nissan Stadium.

The concert, officially tied to “Last Call: One More for the Road – The Finale,” will mark the last full-length concert of Jackson’s touring career. Nissan Stadium lists the event for June 27, 2026, with gates opening at 4:00 p.m. CT and the show scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. CT. For country fans, those details are more than simple logistics. They mark the final countdown to a night that will close one of the most beloved touring chapters in modern country music.
Alan Jackson’s farewell carries even deeper emotion because of the health battle he publicly revealed in 2021. The Country Music Hall of Fame member has shared that he lives with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a progressive nerve condition that affects mobility and balance, making this final Nashville performance feel not only like a career milestone, but like a deeply human goodbye from an artist who has given everything he could to the road.

For more than three decades, Alan Jackson has helped shape country music with a traditional sound that never lost its honesty. His songs did not need to chase trends because they were built on real life: love, faith, marriage, family, grief, working people, small towns, and memories that grow more powerful with time. “Remember When,” “Drive,” “Chattahoochee,” “Livin’ on Love,” and “Where Were You” became more than hits. They became part of weddings, long drives, family stories, heartbreaks, and quiet moments when fans needed a voice that sounded like home.
That is why the NBC special feels so important. Not every fan can travel to Music City. Not every longtime listener can stand inside Nissan Stadium when Alan sings his last songs under the lights. But through the broadcast, people across the country will be able to gather with family, sit in their living rooms, and honor the man whose music has followed them through so many seasons of life.

The farewell is also expected to bring together a major lineup of artists celebrating Alan’s legacy. Reports have listed country stars including Carrie Underwood, George Strait, Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Cody Johnson, and others as part of the historic night. Their presence turns the concert into more than one artist’s final show. It becomes a tribute from country music itself to a man who helped protect its roots while carrying it to new generations.
Still, no matter how many stars stand beside him, the heart of the night will belong to Alan. Fans will be waiting for the familiar voice, the quiet smile, the cowboy hat, and the songs that have always sounded honest without needing to be loud. The final show will not simply celebrate numbers, awards, or records sold. It will celebrate the emotional bond between an artist and the people who made his songs part of their lives.
When “Alan Jackson: The Last Show” airs on NBC, it may become one of the most emotional television events of 2026. It will be a farewell, a thank-you, and a final salute to a voice that helped define country music for generations.
One last stage.
One final bow.
One night America will remember.