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Buy tickets for concert Zach Bryan - 09.05.2026., Huntington Bank Field, Cleveland, United States of America Buy tickets for concert Zach Bryan - 09.05.2026., Huntington Bank Field, Cleveland, United States of America

CONCERT

Zach Bryan

Huntington Bank Field, Cleveland, US
09. May 2026. 19:00h
2026
09
May
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Zach Bryan tickets for Huntington Bank Field concert in Cleveland with Dijon and J.R. Carroll live show

Looking for tickets to Zach Bryan in Cleveland? Huntington Bank Field hosts his 09.05.2026 concert with Dijon and J.R. Carroll, bringing country, folk and Americana songs to a stadium setting. Buy tickets for a night shaped by hits like "Something in the Orange"

Zach Bryan brings a stadium night to the shore of Lake Erie

Zach Bryan performs on 09.05.2026 at 19:00 at Huntington Bank Field in Cleveland, at the stadium that usually belongs to the Cleveland Browns, but is increasingly opening up to major concert nights as well. For Bryan, this is part of the "With Heaven On Tour 2026" tour, announced as his major international stadium stage, and Cleveland is among the first American cities to welcome him in this new phase of his career. Dijon and J.R. Carroll have also been announced for the same event, giving the evening a wider range from country and folk roots to a more intimate soul and indie expression.

Bryan's concert is not a typical glossy country package with distance between the stage and the audience. His recognizability lies in rough, direct writing, songs that sound like diary notes, and choruses that the audience often takes over before he even reaches the end of the verse. "Something in the Orange", "Heading South", "Revival", "Pink Skies" and "I Remember Everything" are not only the best-known titles from the catalog, but also a good cross-section of what has made him one of the most sought-after American singer-songwriters of his generation: a little folk intimacy, a little Red Dirt country, a little heartland rock breadth, and a strong sense that the songs come from real experience.

Tickets for this event are in demand.

Why Cleveland is an important stop on the tour

"With Heaven On Tour 2026" comes after a period in which Zach Bryan went from being an artist with a devoted online audience to a stadium songwriter who fills large venues without losing his raw tone. His 2024 album "The Great American Bar Scene" further expanded that world, with songs that connect bars, roads, family memories, and American landscapes, and collaborators on the release included John Mayer and Bruce Springsteen. At the beginning of 2026, Bryan entered a new album phase with the release "With Heaven on Top", giving this tour fresh context: the audience in Cleveland is not coming only for a cross-section of previous favorites, but also for a concert from a period in which his repertoire is expanding again.

Cleveland is a logical city for this kind of performance. It is a working-class, musically aware city, with the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame a few minutes from the stadium and a long habit of hosting major tours on the shore of Lake Erie. The concert on 09.05.2026 opens a strong run of summer stadium events in Northeast Ohio, so Zach Bryan comes to the city at the moment when the concert season is just gathering momentum. For audiences traveling from other parts of the United States or from abroad, that date can also work as a weekend visit to Cleveland, with music as the central point of the trip.

A musical style that works best live

Bryan's songs often begin quietly: an acoustic guitar, a rough voice, a line that does not try to sound perfect. But on a large stage they gradually expand. "Revival" has turned into a collective audience singalong in earlier concert performances, "Something in the Orange" remains one of his most recognizable moments for those who love slower, melancholic songs, while "I Remember Everything", the duet with Kacey Musgraves that won the Grammy for Best Country Duo/Group Performance and reached the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart, shows how much Bryan has crossed the boundaries of a narrow genre circle.It is also important to say what cannot be claimed in advance: the exact set list for Cleveland has not been confirmed in advance. On tours, Bryan usually builds the concert around major songs from several phases of his career, but the order, song selection, and possible additions depend on the evening. What is certain is only that the audience can expect material from his recognizable country, folk, and Americana world, with the possibility that the new phase around the album "With Heaven on Top" will receive significant space.

What the audience can expect from the evening


  • A large stadium format, but songs that rely on lyrics, voice, and collective singing.

  • A combination of country, folk-rock, Red Dirt sound, and Americana atmosphere.

  • An audience that will include both longtime fans and those who know Bryan from a few major hits.

  • A performance with confirmed guest artists Dijon and J.R. Carroll.

  • An open stadium by Lake Erie, where weather and wind can affect the feel of the evening.



Dijon and J.R. Carroll as an important part of the context

Dijon brings a different color to the evening. His sound is often described through combinations of R&B, soul, indie pop, and a stripped-down singer-songwriter aesthetic. In a stadium setting, that can be an interesting contrast to Bryan's country and Americana core: more texture, more rhythmic elasticity, and fewer expected genre boundaries. For an audience coming only because of Bryan, Dijon can be an opportunity to hear an artist who does not play the same card, but fits well into a concert evening focused on voice, emotion, and performance.J.R. Carroll is even closer to Bryan's world. He comes from Oklahoma, is known as a singer-songwriter and musician connected to Bryan's circle, and his presence makes sense for fans who love the quieter, narrative part of the Americana scene. That does not mean that prearranged joint songs or guest appearances during Bryan's set should be expected, because such details have not been confirmed for Cleveland. But the very fact that Carroll is part of the evening shows that the program is not being built only around the large stadium image, but also around artists who belong to the broader singer-songwriter landscape.

Seats are disappearing quickly.

Huntington Bank Field: a stadium that changes the scale of the concert

Huntington Bank Field is located at 100 Alfred Lerner Way, in the North Coast Harbor area, directly beside Lake Erie. The stadium opened in 1999 and is known as the home of the Cleveland Browns, but its location gives it a different concert character from indoor arenas. Instead of a ceiling and controlled acoustics, the audience here gets open space, air from the lake, and a view toward the waterfront part of the city. For an artist like Bryan, whose songs often evoke roads, bars, small towns, and wide-open spaces, such an environment can work in favor of the experience.The stadium capacity in public guides is listed at around 67 thousand seats, depending on the event configuration. For a concert, that means the feeling of closeness to the artist will depend mostly on the section and ticket position, but also that collective singing will have massive power. Bryan's songs handle that kind of scale well because they do not rely only on production; the choruses are clear, the lyrics are easy to remember, and the quietest moments often gain additional weight precisely when they are sung by a large number of people.

Basic information about the venue


  • Location: Huntington Bank Field, 100 Alfred Lerner Way, Cleveland, Ohio.

  • Area: North Coast Harbor, by Lake Erie and close to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

  • Stadium opening: 1999.

  • Primary purpose: home of the Cleveland Browns, along with concerts and other major events.

  • Public transit access: the nearest rail station is W. 3rd St. Station.



How to get to the stadium

For visitors arriving by public transit, the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority network is the most useful. According to stadium information, the nearest station is W. 3rd St. Station, served by the Blue, Green, and Waterfront lines. Tower City Center Station is connected to all four rail lines and is approximately a 15-minute walk from the stadium via W. 3rd Street. The Waterfront Line operates between Tower City and South Harbor Station during events at Huntington Bank Field, which is practical for those who want to avoid driving all the way to the waterfront.If you are arriving by car, you should expect slower entry into the stadium area and congestion around North Coast Harbor. The stadium page for this concert states that road closures may begin as early as 14:00, which is especially important for travelers planning dinner, accommodation, or sightseeing before the performance. Parking around the stadium is limited and depends on availability, so it is wise to arrive earlier and have a backup plan in downtown Cleveland.

For those coming from outside Cleveland, the lakefront location has an advantage: the stadium is close to downtown, hotel areas, museums, and waterfront attractions. That makes it easier to plan the day without constantly moving by car. In practice, the best rhythm is to arrive in the city earlier, leave the car or luggage, walk to North Coast Harbor, and only then head toward the stadium.

Cleveland before the concert

Cleveland is a city that fits well into the story of Zach Bryan. It is not a destination sold only through shine, but a place with industrial heritage, sporting stubbornness, and a serious musical identity. The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is located in the immediate vicinity of the stadium, so many visitors can combine the music museum and a concert on a large open stage on the same day. The Great Lakes Science Center is also nearby, and the waterfront walk around North Coast Harbor provides a good introduction to the evening.Travelers coming to Cleveland for the first time should keep in mind that May by Lake Erie is changeable. The evening can be pleasant, but an open stadium means it is worth checking the weather forecast and dressing in layers. Unlike indoor arenas, here the concert feels like an event that shares space with the city: the wind, downtown lights, and the lake are part of the setting, not just the background.

It is worth securing tickets in time.

Who this concert is especially attractive for

Longtime fans will get the chance to hear Bryan in a format that shows how much his audience has grown. Those who have followed him since earlier songs such as "Heading South" will probably most appreciate the moments when the stadium becomes a choir for a few minutes, and the songs retain their raw core despite the large space. The broader audience, those who know him through "Something in the Orange", "Pink Skies", or "I Remember Everything", can expect entry into a catalog that is emotionally direct and easy to understand even without deep knowledge of all the albums.The concert is also attractive to lovers of a genre that does not fit neatly into one drawer. Bryan is not only a country artist in the strictest sense. His music has traces of folk, rock, the Red Dirt tradition, and the American singer-songwriter school in which the lyrics carry most of the weight. That is why the audience is not made up only of country fans, but also of people who listen to Tyler Childers, Jason Isbell, Bruce Springsteen, Noah Kahan, or older writers for whom a song begins with a story rather than a production effect.

Practical notes for entry and staying at the stadium

As with all major stadium events, the most important thing is to check the current venue instructions before departure. Huntington Bank Field has a detailed A-Z guide with information about entrances, screenings, bag rules, accessibility, guest services areas, and traffic around the stadium. Since rules can change depending on the type of event, it is best not to rely on habits from earlier concerts or games.

It is especially useful to plan entry without rushing. The concert begins at 19:00, and the area around the stadium will be burdened with traffic, pedestrians, and security checks. If you are arriving in a group, agree on a meeting place before entering, because it is easy to get separated at large stadiums. If you need accessible seating or assistance on the day of the event, the stadium states that visitors can contact guest services on the level for which they have a ticket.

Short preparation before departure


  • Check the weather forecast for Cleveland and bring layered clothing.

  • Plan to arrive earlier because of possible road closures from 14:00.

  • If you use public transit, check the RTA line schedule for the day of the event.

  • Before entering, check the stadium rules for bags and prohibited items.

  • Save your ticket so that it is easily accessible when you arrive at the stadium.



An atmosphere built on collective singing

The best moments of Zach Bryan concerts are usually not those in which the audience watches a perfectly staged picture, but those in which you can hear how many people know every line. Bryan's advantage is that the songs sound personal even when a stadium sings them. In "Pink Skies" sadness does not become pathetic, in "Revival" the energy rises without the need for exaggeration, and in "Something in the Orange" the audience's silence can be just as important as the chorus.

Huntington Bank Field offers a large, open frame for that. One should not expect the intimacy of a small club, but one should expect a feeling of togetherness that arises when thousands of people sing songs written as if they were created for a small room. Exactly that contrast - stripped-down writing and stadium breadth - makes this concert interesting even for those who usually avoid large spaces.Ticket sales for this event are underway.

What should not be expected in advance

No special guests beyond the announced artists Dijon and J.R. Carroll have been confirmed for Cleveland, nor has a final set list been published. That is why it is more honest to speak about Bryan's concert pattern than about guaranteed songs of the evening. His performances often combine major hits, newer material, and songs that work especially well with the audience, but the exact choice remains part of the live character of the tour.

One should not assume in advance the length of the performance, additional effects, or special production moments either. What can be said with more certainty is that Bryan comes to Cleveland at a moment when his repertoire is large, his audience broad, and the tour set at stadium level. That is a concrete enough reason to see the evening as one of the more important country and Americana concerts in the city that season.

The most useful plan for visitors

The best plan for this concert begins earlier than 19:00. Arrive in Cleveland with enough time for traffic, a walk around North Coast Harbor, or a short visit to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, then head toward the stadium before the largest rush of the audience. If you are coming from downtown, the walking route via W. 3rd Street may be simpler than trying to drive into the stadium zone at the last minute. If you are coming from more distant parts of the city, public transit may be a calmer option, especially with the Waterfront Line when it operates for stadium events.

For the evening itself, the most important thing is to bring patience and arrive open to a concert that will not live from just one song. Zach Bryan has built a catalog in a few years that can carry a stadium, but it still sounds best when the lyrics are heard. Cleveland, the lake, a May evening, and an audience that knows the choruses give him a good framework for a performance in which a large space will try to turn into a shared, loud, and emotional room.

Sources:
- Huntington Bank Field - information about the Zach Bryan event, date, start time, announced artists Dijon and J.R. Carroll, ticket availability, accessibility, and announcement of road closures.
- Huntington Bank Field Directions & Parking - information about arrival, parking, GCRTA lines, W. 3rd St. Station, and the distance of Tower City Center Station from the stadium.
- RideRTA - information about the Waterfront Line and service toward the Huntington Bank Field area during events.
- Huntington Bank Field A-Z Guide - general visitor information about entrances, screenings, bag rules, guest assistance, and stadium amenities.
- Pitchfork - announcement of "With Heaven On Tour 2026", broader tour context, list of supporting artists on the tour, and context of Bryan's newer releases.
- Warner Music - information about the album "The Great American Bar Scene", digital release date, number of songs, and featured guest appearances.
- Billboard and Grammy reports - information about the success of the song "I Remember Everything" with Kacey Musgraves, including the Billboard Hot 100 and Grammy recognition.
- Visit Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and North Coast Harbor - context of the stadium location, Cleveland's waterfront area, and nearby attractions for traveling visitors.

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert Zach Bryan

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08 May, 2026, Author: Culture & events desk

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