Alan Jackson’s final concert performance will be filmed June 27 at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium, turning a sold-out stadium show into an NBC primetime special later this year. The farewell, titled Last Call: One More for the Road – The Finale, will capture a moment fans have been waiting to mark: Jackson’s last concert on a major stage before a crowd that bought it out during presales last year.
The timing is why the search terms around the alan jackson final concert special are spiking now. The performance is set for a city that has long been central to Jackson’s career, and the televised version, Alan Jackson: The Last Show, will air later this year on NBC and stream the next day on Peacock. For viewers, it is a chance to see one of country music’s most durable hitmakers close out a live run that spans more than three decades.
The show is built around Jackson’s catalog of hits, and the guest list is heavy with names that underline the scale of the night: Carrie Underwood, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Eric Church and Keith Urban are all expected to appear. Jackson brings a career resume that includes three CMA Entertainer of the Year honors, membership in the Grand Ole Opry for more than 30 years, induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame, plus recognition from Billboard as one of the Top 10 country artists of all time and an ASCAP Heritage Award for the most-performed country songwriter-artist of ASCAP’s first 100 years.
But the farewell label does not quite fit the whole story. In 2023, Jackson said on his daughter Mattie’s podcast that he was still scribbling down ideas, thinking about melodies and felt there would be some more music to come. That makes the June 27 performance feel less like a hard stop than a carefully staged closing chapter, even as the concert is being presented as his final one.
Jackson’s 2021 diagnosis of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease hangs over the event as the clearest reason this may be his last touring-era performance, but NBC has left one important piece unresolved: it has not said which of the guest stars will appear in the televised version. That answer will determine whether the broadcast becomes a broad country showcase or a tighter portrait of Jackson’s own farewell when it reaches NBC viewers later this year.

