Morgan Wallen Tour Setlist 2026: Full Song List, Encore & What to Expect Live

Morgan Wallen Tour Setlist

Morgan Wallen 2026 Setlist

  • The 2026 tour features 27–30 songs, led by tracks from I’m the Problem.
  • Acoustic moments include “Cover Me Up” and “Sand in My Boots”.
  • Fan favorites like “You Proof” and “Whiskey Glasses” remain locked in.
  • The encore closes with “Last Night”, “Just in Case”, and “The Way I Talk”.

The Morgan Wallen Still The Problem Tour is the first time Wallen has built a full stadium show around I’m the Problem, and that shift shows immediately. Six of the album’s songs anchor the opening stretch. The set does not ease fans in with legacy hits — it opens with fresh material and earns the crowd’s trust before the big sing-along moments arrive.

This is also the most production-heavy show Wallen has staged. The 2026 stage features four pit areas instead of the usual two, a catwalk extending deep into the stadium floor, and a separate acoustic B-stage at the far end of the floor. That layout creates two completely different viewing experiences within the same concert — full-band stadium production, then an intimate solo piano moment fewer than 50 feet from general-admission fans.

Morgan with guitar on stage

The fan-voted song slot changes how the crowd engages before the show even starts. Fans vote via a pre-show poll, and the winner gets performed mid-set. In Minneapolis, “7 Summers” won both nights. That may shift by city as the tour continues.

For full tour context, including city-by-city dates and support acts, the Morgan Wallen artist profile covers his catalog and touring history in detail.

Full 2026 Setlist — Confirmed Live (Minneapolis, April 10–11)

This is the setlist performed at U.S. Bank Stadium on April 10 and April 11, 2026. Both nights used the same song order. Guest appearances and the fan-voted selection are noted below.

Walkout Broadway Girls (Lil Durk song — walk-out track as Wallen makes his way to the main stage)

Main Set — Opening Run (Songs 1–11)

  1. Don’t We — I’m the Problem
  2. I Wrote the Book — One Thing at a Time
  3. I’m the Problem — I’m the Problem
  4. One Thing at a Time — One Thing at a Time
  5. I Got Better — I’m the Problem
  6. Chasin’ You — Dangerous: The Double Album
  7. 20 Cigarettes — I’m the Problem
  8. Heartless — Collaboration
  9. Love Somebody — I’m the Problem
  10. Dark Til Daylight — I’m the Problem
  11. Ain’t That Some — I’m the Problem

Acoustic / B-Stage (Songs 12–14) 12. Cover Me Up (Jason Isbell cover) — acoustic 13. I’m a Little Crazy — Night 1: solo · Night 2: with HARDY 14. Wasted on You — acoustic

Morgan live performance

Main Stage Return (Songs 15–27) 15. Up Down — with Gavin Adcock & Vincent Mason 16. Cowgirls — Night 1: with Thomas Rhett · Night 2: solo 17. 7 Summers — fan-voted song (both nights, Minneapolis) 18. TN 19. Thinkin’ Bout Me 20. You Proof 21. This Bar 22. More Than My Hometown 23. Just in Case 24. The Way I Talk 25. I Had Some Help (Post Malone feature) 26. Sand in My Boots — solo piano 27. Last Night

Encore (Song 28) 28. Whiskey Glasses

Night 1 vs. Night 2 — What Changes

The overall structure stays the same across both Minneapolis nights. What shifts are the guest appearances and the walkout moment.

MomentNight 1 — April 10Night 2 — April 11
Walkout GuestNFL Hall of Famer Jared AllenMinnesota Twins legend Joe Mauer
Pre-Show IntroComedian Theo Von videoComedian Theo Von video
Direct SupportThomas RhettHARDY
“Cowgirls” GuestThomas RhettNo guest
B-Stage GuestSolo performanceHARDY joins for “I’m a Little Crazy”
“Up Down” GuestsGavin Adcock & Vincent Mason (white Masters caddy jumpsuits)Gavin Adcock & Vincent Mason
Fan Vote Winner7 Summers7 Summers
Total Songs2828

The pattern established in Minneapolis will likely carry through the rest of the tour. Expect the direct support act to appear during “Cowgirls” on Night 1 dates. On Night 2 dates, the B-stage segment is where the bigger surprise tends to happen — HARDY’s unannounced appearance during “I’m a Little Crazy” was the loudest crowd moment of that entire stretch.

Morgan Wallen Setlist infographics

The 2026 Stage Layout — What It Means for Your Spot

The 2026 stage is a completely redesigned layout. The main stage sits at one end of the stadium, with a long “airplane” catwalk extending to the center of the floor. Two large extensions branch off the catwalk mid-way, putting Wallen within reach of floor fans from multiple angles. The B-stage sits at the opposite end of the stadium floor — roughly where you would find the back of a standard general-admission pit at most shows.

Morgan Wallen - Spotify update infographics

That B-stage setup is worth planning around. If you hold a floor ticket close to the B-stage end, you get the main show at a distance but the acoustic segment at close range. Some fans deliberately positioned themselves there in Minneapolis and described the piano performance of “Sand in My Boots” as the highlight of the night.

Seats on the lower bowl at mid-sideline give you both stages clearly and benefit from the giant video screens flanking both ends. Upper deck fans see the full spectacle — pyrotechnics, screen graphics, and fire effects that are actually harder to appreciate from the floor directly below.

For a deeper look at the Minneapolis show experience, the Morgan Wallen Minneapolis concert guide covers U.S. Bank Stadium seating, parking, and logistics in full.

“Broadway Girls” – Morgan Wallen & Lil Durk!

Song-by-Song Breakdown — What Each Section Delivers

The Opening 11 Songs

“Don’t We” opens the show quietly before the production hits full force. It is not the bombastic opener fans might expect — and that restraint works. By the time “I’m the Problem” arrives at position three, the crowd is already locked in. “I Got Better,” “20 Cigarettes,” and “Heartless” follow in rapid succession, covering the biggest I’m the Problem singles in a single unbroken run.

“Ain’t That Some” closes the first section and sends Wallen offstage to the B-stage. The energy has been rising steadily for about 40 minutes at this point. The walk gives the crowd a moment to breathe before the most intimate segment of the night begins.

The B-Stage Acoustic Segment

“Cover Me Up” always lands hard. It is a Jason Isbell cover that Wallen has made his own over years of touring, and the stripped-back version here — no full band, close proximity to the fans at that end of the floor — draws some of the most intense crowd response of the night. In Minneapolis, the silence before the first chord was audible across the lower bowl.

The guest slot on “I’m a Little Crazy” is where Night 2 surprised. Gavin Adcock spent both nights as a support act, but HARDY’s unannounced B-stage appearance on Night 2 changed the atmosphere entirely. That is the kind of moment repeat attendees come back for.

“Wasted on You” closes the acoustic run. Positioned after two high-intensity acoustic moments, it lands differently than it would mid-set — quieter, more emotional, and built for a stadium that has just been brought to its knees twice.

The Main Stage Return and Guest Collaborations

The show shifts back to full production for “Up Down.” In Minneapolis, Gavin Adcock and Vincent Mason joined wearing white Masters-style caddy jumpsuits — which became one of the most-talked-about visual moments from opening week. “Cowgirls” followed, with Thomas Rhett stepping in on Night 1.

The fan-voted song at position 17 is a smart structural choice. It drops mid-way through the main stage return, when energy is high but the biggest crowd sing-alongs are still ahead. In Minneapolis, “7 Summers” won both nights, but that outcome is not guaranteed in other cities.

The stretch from “TN” through “I Had Some Help” covers some of Wallen’s most-streamed material. He performs “I Had Some Help” as a solo run rather than a duet — Post Malone is not on tour — but the crowd handles the other vocal part themselves. That track has crossed one billion streams on Spotify, and the crowd recognition reflects it.

Sand in My Boots — The Quiet Peak

This is the song most people mention when describing the concert afterward. Wallen performs it alone at a piano, and the contrast from the full-production show surrounding it is striking. No pyrotechnics. No backing band. Just the piano and a stadium that has learned to be quiet at exactly this moment. It lasts about four minutes and ends to immediate, extended crowd noise.

The Closing Run and Encore

Morgan Tops list

“Last Night” is the emotional anchor of the entire show. By position 27, the crowd has been building toward it for nearly two hours. The mass sing-along covers every lyric. Wallen holds the final note longer than the recorded version. Then he exits.

“Whiskey Glasses” is the encore. It is the song that launched his mainstream career, now 13x Platinum certified per RIAA data. Hearing it after 27 songs gives it a different weight than it would carry earlier in the set. The show ends there — no second encore, no extended goodbye.

How Long Is a Morgan Wallen Concert in 2026?

Both Minneapolis shows ran approximately 1 hour and 55 minutes from Wallen’s walkout to the end of “Whiskey Glasses.” That does not include the opening acts. The full night at U.S. Bank Stadium started at 5:15 PM with the first opener and ran past 11 PM.

Plan accordingly: doors open roughly 90 minutes before the first opener. If you want to see all four acts — including Gavin Adcock, Vincent Mason, and the direct support — arrive by 5 PM local time. Wallen typically hits the stage around 9:15–9:30 PM at stadium shows.

Does the Setlist Change City to City?

The core 28 songs stay consistent. What changes are the guest appearances during “Cowgirls,” “I’m a Little Crazy,” and “Up Down.” Each city has different direct support — Brooks & Dunn, Thomas Rhett, Ella Langley, or HARDY depending on the date — and those acts tend to appear during the slots described above.

The fan-voted song is the only element that is genuinely unpredictable. The ballot includes a fixed shortlist of Wallen deep cuts and fan favorites, and the winner changes depending on which fanbase shows up hardest in each city. “7 Summers” won Minneapolis twice, but that result is not a given elsewhere.

If you are attending multiple shows on this tour, the most meaningful differences will be in the B-stage guest moment and the Night 1 vs. Night 2 direct support. The song order itself rarely shifts.

What to Know Before You Go

The B-stage sits at the far end of the stadium floor from the main stage. If you have a floor ticket, decide early whether you want proximity to the main stage or proximity to the B-stage for the acoustic segment. Both are excellent positions. Splitting the difference puts you near the “Up Down” catwalk extensions, which is also strong.

Flatland Cavalry Joins Morgan

Merchandise lines are long. The merch truck opens earlier than main doors at most stadium dates. Arriving early gets you better selection and shorter waits. Wallen tour merch typically sells out of popular items well before showtime.

The pre-show Theo Von video plays roughly 15 minutes before Wallen’s walkout and serves as a reliable signal that the main event is about to start. Use it to get back to your seats from concessions.

A portion of every ticket sold benefits the Morgan Wallen Foundation, which supports youth sports and music programs. The foundation’s Tour Give Back initiative has contributed more than $1 million in instruments to schools in touring cities.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the full Morgan Wallen setlist for the Still The Problem Tour 2026?
The confirmed 28-song setlist, based on both Minneapolis opening nights, runs: Don’t We / I Wrote the Book / I’m the Problem / One Thing at a Time / I Got Better / Chasin’ You / 20 Cigarettes / Heartless / Love Somebody / Dark Til Daylight / Ain’t That Some — then B-stage: Cover Me Up / I’m a Little Crazy / Wasted on You — then main stage return: Up Down / Cowgirls / Fan-Voted Song (7 Summers in Minneapolis) / TN / Thinkin’ Bout Me / You Proof / This Bar / More Than My Hometown / Just in Case / The Way I Talk / I Had Some Help / Sand in My Boots / Last Night — then encore: Whiskey Glasses. The walkout song is Broadway Girls by Lil Durk.

Q: How long is a Morgan Wallen concert in 2026?
Both Minneapolis shows ran roughly 1 hour and 55 minutes from Wallen’s walkout to the final note of “Whiskey Glasses.” Guest appearances and extended crowd moments can push the runtime slightly past two hours. The full night — including four opening acts — runs from about 5:15 PM to after 11 PM at stadium dates. Plan to be in position by 9 PM to catch the full walkout.

Q: Does Morgan Wallen play the same setlist every night?
The core 28 songs and their order stay consistent. What changes are the guest appearances — different support acts join for “Cowgirls,” “I’m a Little Crazy,” and “Up Down” depending on the bill that night — and the fan-voted mid-set song, which is determined by a pre-show poll. The song order itself very rarely shifts from night to night on this tour.

Q: What is the fan-voted song at Morgan Wallen’s 2026 shows?
Before each show, fans participate in a pre-show vote to select one song from a fixed shortlist. On both Minneapolis opening nights, “7 Summers” won and was performed at position 17 in the setlist, just after “Cowgirls.” The winning song varies by city, so check Wallen’s official social channels before your show to see if the ballot is posted.

Q: What song does Morgan Wallen walk out to in 2026?
Wallen walks from the locker room to the main stage while “Broadway Girls” by Lil Durk plays over the stadium speakers. The walkout also features a local celebrity or sports figure. In Minneapolis, NFL Hall of Famer Jared Allen appeared on Night 1 and Minnesota Twins legend Joe Mauer on Night 2. Each city on the tour is expected to feature a locally recognizable guest for this moment.

Q: Does Morgan Wallen play “Sand in My Boots” on the 2026 tour?
Yes, and it is one of the most memorable moments of the show. Wallen performs it as a solo piano piece near the end of the main set, at position 26 of 28. The stripped-back delivery — no full band, just piano — creates one of the sharpest contrasts of the entire night. In Minneapolis, it drew the longest sustained crowd response of any single song on the setlist.