Concert

Post Malone tickets for Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte with Jelly Roll and country fan favorites

Tuesday, 9 June 2026 at 7:30 PM · Bank of America Stadium Charlotte
· Capacity: 75,037
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Tickets for Post Malone tickets for Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte with Jelly Roll and country fan favorites — Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte — Tuesday, 9 June 2026 Karlobag.eu / illustration

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Looking for tickets to Post Malone in Charlotte? The Bank of America Stadium concert brings his pop-rap hits, the country turn behind "F-1 Trillion", and performances by Jelly Roll and Carter Faith for fans who want a broad stadium show with familiar choruses and new songs

Post Malone in Charlotte: a concert that brings together rap, pop and a new country phase

Post Malone is coming to Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte on 09.06.2026 at 19:30, as part of "The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2". This is not just another date at a major American stadium: Charlotte gets an evening in which the old Post Malone - the songwriter behind "rockstar", "Circles", "Sunflower" and "Congratulations" - meets the newer country phase that can clearly be heard on the album "F-1 Trillion". Tickets for this event are in demand.

This concert is especially interesting because Post Malone today no longer belongs to just one genre. For years, his sound has moved between hip-hop, pop, melodic rap, rock sensibility and ballads, and the latest phase of his career has brought him closer to the country audience. For the audience, that means a set that does not have to rely on one color: a stadium chorus, a guitar introduction, a rapper's rhythm and a country duet can all be found in the same evening, without the feeling that it is a sudden turn.

Why this tour is different from earlier performances

"The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2" was announced as a continuation of his major stadium series with Jelly Roll, and Charlotte is among the cities getting the full stadium version of the performance. Alongside Post Malone and Jelly Roll, Carter Faith has also been announced for the headlining dates, a young country songwriter whose style draws on contemporary Nashville, but also on a more classic feeling of storytelling through song. This gives the evening a clearer country framework than a classic pop-rap concert would have.

Jelly Roll is not just a guest filling the program before the main artist. His audience comes from country, rock, rap and American roots music, and his collaboration with Post Malone on the song "Losers" from the album "F-1 Trillion" clearly shows why this combination works. Both of them build songs around a rough voice, direct emotion and choruses that easily carry into large spaces. Seats are disappearing quickly.

Carter Faith has a different role in this context. Her performance can be a quieter introduction to the evening, with an emphasis on lyrics, melody and country tone, before the stadium moves into a much louder part of the program. For visitors who arrive earlier, it is an opportunity to hear an artist who fits into the tour's new soundscape, not just a randomly chosen opening act.

The album "F-1 Trillion" and a new phase of the career

"F-1 Trillion" is the album that firmly placed Post Malone in the country conversation. It features Tim McGraw, Hank Williams Jr., Morgan Wallen, Blake Shelton, Dolly Parton, Brad Paisley, Luke Combs, Lainey Wilson, Jelly Roll, Sierra Ferrell, Chris Stapleton, HARDY and Billy Strings. Such a list of collaborators is not decoration, but an explanation of direction: Post Malone approached country through duets, a band-driven sound and stories that are sung loudly, often in the first person.

For the audience in Charlotte, this matters because the concert will not live only on nostalgia for hits from earlier years. Songs such as "I Had Some Help", "Pour Me A Drink", "Losers" and "Guy For That" give this performance fresh material that naturally connects with the stadium audience of the American South. At the same time, earlier hits remain part of the artist's identity: the audience that has followed him since "Stoney" and "beerbongs & bentleys" is probably coming because of the same voice, but today hears it in a broader framework.

It is also important to emphasize what must not be assumed: the exact set list for Charlotte has not been published. That is why it is wiser to speak about the expected range than to promise individual songs. Based on the character of the tour and the current material, the most realistic expectation is a cross-section of hits, fan favorites and country songs from the newer phase, with Jelly Roll and Carter Faith appearing in their announced roles.

What kind of concert different audiences can expect

This is a concert for several circles of audiences at once. Longtime fans come because of Post Malone's recognizable melancholy, the cracking of his voice in high choruses and the songs that marked rap's transition into the pop mainstream. The wider audience comes because his biggest singles have long since moved beyond genre boundaries. Country fans have an additional reason: "F-1 Trillion" and joint performances with names from Nashville have brought him closer to an audience that, a few years ago, might not have planned to attend his concert.

In the stadium, the songs that will work best are those with a clear chorus and enough space for the audience to sing along. Post Malone is strongest when he does not try to sound perfectly polished, but when he leaves a little roughness in his voice. It is precisely that imperfection that connects his rap-pop songs with the new country material: both rest on the feeling that the singer is not pretending distance, but wants to be at the center of communal singing.

  • For longtime fans: the concert brings an opportunity to hear how the older hits fit into his current, more guitar-driven sound.
  • For the country audience: Jelly Roll, Carter Faith and material from "F-1 Trillion" give the evening a clear Nashville direction.
  • For the wider audience: this is a stadium concert format with songs that have already been present for years on radio, streaming charts and major festivals.

Bank of America Stadium as a concert space

Bank of America Stadium is located in Uptown, Charlotte's city center, and has 75,037 seats. It is the home of the Carolina Panthers and Charlotte FC, but in recent years the stadium has increasingly functioned as a major concert address as well. For a performance like this, that means a wide visual picture, a view of a massive audience and a sense of open space that is not the same as an arena or indoor hall.

Stadium acoustics are never as intimate as in a club, so the experience is more tied to scale, production, communal singing and the energy of the stands. In the front sections, the audience gets a feeling of closeness to the performer, while the upper levels offer a broader panorama of the stage and the crowd. This matters for Post Malone because his songs often move from a quieter, almost confessional beginning into a big chorus; the stadium emphasizes exactly that leap.

Charlotte is a logical city for this tour. It lies in a region where pop, hip-hop, rock and country audiences easily meet, and a summer outdoor concert fits well with the newer sound Post Malone is building around guitars and country collaborations. It is worth securing tickets in time.

Arrival, parking and moving around Uptown

The simplest advice for arrival is: plan to get to Uptown earlier. The stadium is surrounded by city traffic, garages, restaurants and pedestrian routes, so crowds form not only at the entrances but also in the surrounding streets. According to stadium data, within a 10- to 15-minute walk there are more than 30,000 parking spaces, but for a concert of this profile it is more practical to assume that the nearest garages will be the most sought after.

For visitors who do not want to drive through the city center, the LYNX Blue Line is a very useful option. The line connects the southern part of the city and Uptown, and the Carson, Stonewall and Convention Center stations are located within a few blocks of the stadium. This is especially convenient for those staying in hotels outside the immediate center or who want to avoid returning by car immediately after the concert ends.

If you are arriving by car, check the route before departure and expect slower movement around I-77, I-277, Trade Street, Morehead Street and Mint Street. For guests with disabilities, a drop-off zone is provided at the corner of Mint and Morehead Streets. On an evening with a large audience, it is useful to agree on a meeting point before entering the stadium, because the mobile network may slow down when a large number of people gather in the same space.

Entry rules worth knowing before departure

Bank of America Stadium enforces a clear bag policy. Clear plastic, vinyl or PVC bags up to 12" x 6" x 12" are allowed, as are small purses, clutch bags or fanny packs up to 4.5" x 6.5". Visitors may also bring two sealed 16.9 oz bottles of water per person. Rules like these are best checked while packing, because returning to the car or hotel can mean missing the opening part of the evening.

For the concert, it is smart to bring as few things as possible: a mobile phone, identification document, payment card, full battery and only what truly needs to fit into the permitted bag. Large stadiums speed up entry when the audience does not carry items that must be inspected for a long time. It is a small detail that can decide whether you enter calmly, find your section and arrive in time for the start of the program.

Charlotte for visitors traveling to the concert

Uptown Charlotte is compact enough that the concert can be combined with dinner, a short walk or a hotel stay in the city center. Nearby are office buildings, bars, restaurants, museums and sports venues, so around the stadium even before the concert there is an urban rhythm, not just lines in front of the entrances. Visitors arriving from other cities can use the day to tour the center, and in the evening approach the stadium on foot or by light rail.

Charlotte in June has a dense events calendar, which means that concerts, sports programs, food events and city festivals can overlap on the same weekend and in the same week. That is good for the atmosphere, but it requires a little more planning for accommodation, transport and the evening return. Ticket sales for this event are underway.

How to prepare for the evening

The best plan is simple: arrive earlier, eat before entering if you do not want to depend on lines, prepare the permitted bag and choose your return route in advance. Since the concert starts at 19:30, the summer evening will build part of the atmosphere even before dark, and the stadium peak will probably develop as the space fills and the audience takes over the choruses.

You should not expect a club concert or quiet listening to an album from beginning to end. This is an evening for loud singing, for an audience that knows the lyrics and for an artist whose career has for years moved between streaming hits, festival performances and now country stadiums. In that combination lies the appeal of Charlotte: Post Malone is not coming as an artist locked into one phase, but as a songwriter carrying his best-known songs into a new, guitar-marked story.

Sources:

- Bank of America Stadium - information about the Post Malone + Jelly Roll concert, the date, venue and start of ticket sales.

- Post Malone - performance schedule and "F-1 Trillion" album page, including the track list and collaborators.

- Live Nation Newsroom - context of "The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2", announcement of Jelly Roll and Carter Faith.

- Carolina Panthers and Bank of America Stadium - stadium capacity, bag rules, permitted water bottles and parking information.

- Charlotte FC and local Charlotte guides - transport by LYNX Blue Line, stations near the stadium and Uptown context for visitors.

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