Concerts, College Games, and the 2027 Launch
Nihill laid out a clear, aggressive timeline for the new Nissan Stadium. The concrete is pouring, the steel is rising, and the facility will host 8 to 10 major events before the Titans even take the field for the 2027 preseason. The first ticketed event will be a premier concert in April, followed shortly by CMA Fest in June 2027. Nihill also confirmed the franchise plans to offer standing-room-only tickets for regular-season games and mega-events, ensuring max capacity for big-ticket matchups.
Fans hoping for a Music City Super Bowl will need to practice patience. With Las Vegas locked in for 2029 (Super Bowl LXIII), Los Angeles hosting next year, and Atlanta on deck, Nihill circled the early 2030s as the realistic target for Nashville’s turn on the global stage. The organization wants to iron out every operational wrinkle before inviting the league’s biggest spectacle to town.
The 2026 Farewell Tour and a Retail Surge
Before the wrecking balls arrive, Nashville will celebrate its current home. The 2026 season marks the official farewell tour for the existing Nissan Stadium. Nihill promised a series of unique activations honoring the building that housed the Music City Miracle and decades of Titans history. Once the 2026 campaign ends, demolition begins immediately. The tear-down will take roughly six to nine months to flatten the structure and fill the bowl completely.
Excitement for the future already translates to the cash register. Following the highly anticipated March 12 uniform and logo reveal, merchandise flew off the shelves at the team store. Sales spiked dramatically compared to previous offseasons, proving the fan base is eagerly buying into the new aesthetic.
“He certainly has a presence about him. What matters is what they are able to do out there on the field, but it definitely feels like the air in the building has changed, in a good way.”
— Burke Nihill, Titans President and CEO (on Head Coach Robert Saleh)
Franchise Implications / What’s Next
The Titans are executing a total organizational rebuild. General Manager Mike Borgonzi, now entering his second year with full control of the 53-man roster, secured Robert Saleh in January to completely overhaul the team’s identity. Saleh brings a hard-nosed, defensive-minded intensity that the locker room desperately needed. As the front office repairs the Vanderbilt Health Center practice fields ahead of training camp, the coaching staff is busy prepping young quarterback Cam Ward and the rest of the core for a grueling 2026 AFC South gauntlet. If Saleh and Borgonzi translate this offseason momentum into regular-season wins, the Titans will march into their new $2 billion palace in 2027 as a legitimate AFC powerhouse.

