There was a moment during Alan Jackson’s final concert at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium on June 27, 2026, that said more than any song could. As Jackson walked toward his microphone — stiffly, deliberately — the crowd of tens of thousands fell into a kind of reverent hush. Then they exploded. since they comprehended. This was more than a retirement. Despite a body that had been subtly working against him for years, this was a man completing something on his own terms.
Jackson’s age is sixty-seven. He was born in Newnan, Georgia, on October 17, 1958, and over the course of nearly forty years, he built one of the most enduring careers in American country music, with 35 number-one hits, 75 million records sold worldwide, and a 2017 induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame. A portion of the story is revealed by those figures. His well-being speaks for itself.

In 2021, Jackson made public what his close friends and family had known for years: he had been diagnosed with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease in 2011. Not to be confused with the cable network, CMT is a genetic neurological condition that gradually damages the peripheral nerves, which control movement and sensation in the limbs. It results in muscle weakness that usually begins in the lower legs and feet and gradually moves upward. There isn’t a treatment.
Jackson claimed on the Today show that his father had given him the illness, which had already spread to other members of his family. “It’s been affecting me for years,” he stated, “and it’s getting more and more obvious.” He described stumbling on stage, struggling with balance even while standing still at a microphone. The admission struck hard for a performer whose presence—that steady, leisurely baritone anchored to a stage floor—had always seemed almost immovable.
What’s remarkable, in hindsight, is how long he kept going. “One More For The Road,” his farewell tour, was revealed in March 2022. He played hundreds of dates across four years before the final night in Nashville. Jackson performed with what witnesses called “real ferocity” on that final night, despite looking stiff as he made his entrance. He ran through decades’ worth of hits, moved from side to side of the stage, and stopped to speak to the audience as if he understood exactly what he was leaving behind. Before the evening became overly sentimental, he even joked, “I’m not dead.”
CMT is progressive, meaning it does not plateau. It usually results in muscle weakness that rises from the lower extremities and occasionally reaches the hands and arms. That trajectory is particularly cruel to a guitarist whose career has been built on physical performance. Jackson himself observed that the amount of strumming had decreased, which is a minor detail that has significant significance for a guitarist and songwriter.
The fact that Jackson kept this a secret for ten years before making it public is worth considering. He was diagnosed in 2011 and didn’t speak openly about it until 2021. It’s hard to say if that was pride, a desire to preserve the audience’s experience, or something more elusive. Probably some mixture of all three. Knowing what was going on underneath while watching him perform in those years reframes a lot.
One dollar from each ticket sold went to the CMT Research Foundation, an organization seeking a cure, so the farewell concert itself raised awareness in a tangible way. It was a modest, pragmatic gesture, perfectly fitting for a man who has never been drawn to spectacle for its own sake.
At 67, Alan Jackson is not retiring from music entirely. Two days before his final show, he released a country cover of “Still the One” to mark 50 years with his wife Denise, his high school sweetheart. The touring has ended. It appears that the music isn’t.
The catalog is all that’s left, along with a career that transcended record labels, trends, and now, in a way, his own body’s cooperation. There is something noteworthy about that.
