Shaboozey has announced “The Outlaws Never Die Tour,” a fall 2026 headline run featuring seven supporting artists from across country and hip-hop.
The country-rap artist posted the full lineup on Instagram. Joining him on the road are Brittney Spencer, Noeline Hofmann, BigXthaPlug, Kash Culpepper, Noah Cyrus, Carter Faith, and Angl.Whte. His caption was direct: “Taking this story on the road in the fall. This time I got some friends riding with me.”
Presale is live. Fans can sign up for a code through the link in Shaboozey’s bio.
The roster spans two genres with real depth. Brittney Spencer is a Nashville-based artist known for blending country with R&B. She’s been building critical recognition with a distinctive sound. It lives well outside mainstream Nashville’s current template. Carter Faith brings a more traditional country angle and has developed a loyal following through steady touring and strong songwriting. Noah Cyrus has shifted toward folk-leaning country in recent years and has earned solid critical attention for it. BigXthaPlug is a Dallas-based rapper with a strong independent following. His style maps naturally alongside Shaboozey’s sound. Angl.Whte fills out the hip-hop side of the bill.
Noeline Hofmann and Kash Culpepper also appear on the lineup. Both have been steadily building their profiles in the country-adjacent lane through live performances and touring.
The announcement comes at a significant point in Shaboozey’s career. His 2024 single “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” spent 19 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. That run broke records for the longest chart-topping streak in the Hot 100’s modern history. The song pulled country fans and hip-hop listeners into the same audience at scale. Shaboozey has been building on that overlap ever since.
Most of that momentum has come through festival bookings and select live dates. A proper headline tour is new territory. With seven supporting acts pulled from different corners of two genres, this isn’t a standard club run. It looks more like a traveling showcase built for audiences from both worlds.
The tour name itself carries meaning. “Outlaw country” as a label goes back to the 1970s, connected to artists like Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings. They recorded outside Nashville’s mainstream system on their own terms. Applying that label to a country-rap tour in 2026 is a deliberate framing choice. It puts Shaboozey and his collaborators outside any single genre category.
No dates or venues have been confirmed yet. The presale is open now, and a full schedule announcement is expected to follow.
Shaboozey built his breakout on collapsing the wall between country and hip-hop. A headline tour at this scale is the logical next step. Fans just need the dates.
