Alan Jackson’s final concert sold out immediately, and the response is now spilling beyond Nissan Stadium in Nashville. NBC, Peacock, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Belmont University are giving fans three new ways to watch the June 27 show.
June 27 is the date Jackson will play his final concert at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, with his portion of the show running from around 8:30 to 10:00. The ticket rush left the in-person crowd capped fast, which is why the new viewing setup matters more than a standard broadcast announcement.
NBC and Peacock add access
NBC will tape the concert with a full film crew for a primetime concert special. The network has not set the air date yet, but Peacock will stream the special the day after it airs, giving the show a second life after the stadium date.
That sequence creates a clear split for viewers: the stadium crowd gets the live experience on June 27, while everyone else is pushed into later distribution through TV and streaming. For a final concert built around demand that outran supply, that is the practical workaround.
Country Music Hall of Fame sells out
The Country Music Hall of Fame opened the CMA Theater for a live feed from the concert, and tickets for that option were free but required a reservation. The reservation window closed quickly; the CMA Theater event has sold out.
People inside the viewing rooms will get a full Alan Jackson concert through the live feed, not a clipped highlight reel. The live band at the Belmont University event goes on before the feed begins, which makes that site more than a passive screen-and-seat setup.
Belmont University seats remain
Belmont University’s Fisher Center is still selling tickets for the same live feed, and all proceeds will go toward launching the Alan Jackson Legacy endowed scholarship at Belmont University. That makes the remaining tickets the only live option left in Nashville for fans who missed Nissan Stadium and the CMA Theater reservation.
Jackson’s final concert already has a built-in contradiction: the in-person show sold out immediately, but the new viewing options are staggered by platform and place. If you want the stadium night itself, the door is shut; if you want access, the Fisher Center is the only announced in-person seat still available, while Peacock waits on the other side of the TV special.






