Country Music Icon Sets the Record Straight on Retirement as 60th Birthday Looms

The entertainer shared his thoughts on leaving the music world behind.

Kenny Chesney Offers Rare Insight Into His Private Love Life - Parade

Rejoice, No Shoes Nation! Kenny Chesney won’t be retiring any time soon. The country music icon, who is preparing an upcoming stint at The Sphere in Las Vegas, talked about his future plans in an interview with People magazine that was published on Thursday, Oct. 30.

“I know this sounds crazy, but to be in front of 60,000 people on stage, that is where I feel the most comfortable in my life. It truly is. Because when we’re up there for two hours, nobody can mess with me or the band. It’s just us giving the audience everything we have and the audience giving everything back,” Chesney, 57, told the outlet.

Chesney, who will turn 60 in 2028, expressed a genuine love for making music and performing.

“That is one of the most unbelievable feelings that I’ve ever felt in my life. It’s my drug of choice. I don’t regret giving my whole adult life to creating because… what a way to live. That’s what I’ve always done,” he told People, adding, “I love what I do. I love making music and I love being on that stage, more than any place in the world. … I love creating. That’s what I’ve always done, so I don’t see [slowing down] in my near future. My life is already so planned out. I know what I’m doing in 2027!”

Chesney is really excited for his June 2026 shows and that’s where he’s focused at the present time. He hasn’t shared any definitive plans — or potential tours — outside of what’s already been announced.

“The more I watched the fans having this experience I’m sure they couldn’t imagine, the more ideas I had – both to reconfigure some of last year’s songs, and a few songs that seemed like they should get this immersive treatment – and wanted to do,” Chesney said on his decision to return to The Sphere.

Ahead of his 2026 shows at The Sphere, Chesney will be busy promoting his new book, “Heart Life Music,” which will be released on Nov. 4. He calls the book “a love letter to people who shaped and inspired me,” according to the New York Post.