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Green, Zimmerman, Wetzel and More To Bring The Heat To St. Pete Country Fest This November

Country music’s festival circuit just added another can’t-miss weekend to the calendar, and this one reads like a perfectly built playlist for fans who like their country loud, rowdy, rootsy, and rising all at once.


Courtesy Of Artist Facebook
Courtesy Of Artist Facebook

St. Pete Country Fest is officially saddling up for November 20–22, 2026 at Vinoy Park in St. Petersburg, Florida, stacking its lineup with arena headliners, red-hot risers, and cult-favorite road warriors, the kind of mix that turns a weekend into a moment.


At the top of the bill, the festival swings big: Koe Wetzel, Riley Green, and Bailey Zimmerman, three artists who each represent a different, dominant lane of modern country. Wetzel brings the rough-edged, genre-blurring intensity. Green delivers blue-collar traditionalism with mass appeal. Zimmerman continues his chart-shaking ascent as one of the format’s most explosive crossover forces. Together, they form a headlining trio that signals this festival isn’t playing it safe, it’s playing it loud.


But the real story of St. Pete Country Fest lives in the depth of the roster.


The next tier reads like a snapshot of country’s current surge class: Tucker Wetmore, Stephen Wilson Jr., Warren Zeiders, Dylan Gossett, Cameron Whitcomb, and Charles Wesley Godwin, artists who’ve each built fierce fan bases by carving distinct sonic identities rather than chasing trends. From Zeiders’ gravel-and-fire vocals to Godwin’s Appalachian weight and Whitcomb’s emotional edge, this is a lineup built on voice and vision.




Dig further and the weekend keeps unfolding with purpose. ERNEST, Chase Matthew, Corey Kent, and Evan Honer bring songwriting credibility and crowd-tested energy, while the undercard is packed with names that industry watchers know are one breakout moment away: Pecos & The Rooftops, Josh Ross, Zach John King, Buffalo Traffic Jam, Noah Rinker, Tyler Nance, Hannah McFarland, Laci Kaye Booth, Jason Scott & The High Heat, and more. It’s less filler, more farm system, a discovery engine baked directly into the schedule.


Even the details feel intentional. An all-weekend set from DJ Slim McGraw promises connective tissue between sets, the sonic glue that keeps the party moving between guitar changes and sunset slots.


Set against the waterfront backdrop of Vinoy Park, the festival’s branding leans into sunshine-and-bootprint energy, but the artist selection suggests something more deliberate: a bridge between where country radio is, where country culture is, and where country music is heading next.


In other words, St. Pete Country Fest isn’t just booking names, it’s curating a snapshot of the genre’s momentum.


Circle the dates. Bring the boots. Pace yourself. This one’s built for the long haul.



ALL COUNTRY NEWS

Country Music News & Entertainment



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