Tim McGraw, Paul Overstreet and The Stanley Brothers Named Country Music Hall of Fame Class of 2026

The Country Music Association has named its Hall of Fame class of 2026, and it is a significant one. Tim McGraw, Paul Overstreet, and The Stanley Brothers will be inducted this year, representing the Modern Era Artist, Songwriter, and Veterans Era Artist categories respectively. The announcement was made today at the Rotunda at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville, hosted by Hall of Fame member Marty Stuart and streamed live on CMA’s YouTube channel.

Overstreet will be inducted in the Songwriter category, which is awarded every third year in rotation with the Non-Performer and Recording and/or Touring Musician categories. The Stanley Brothers will be inducted in the Veterans Era Artist category and McGraw in the Modern Era Artist category.

“Each year, this moment serves as a powerful reminder of the people whose passion and dedication have defined Country Music at its very best,” said Sarah Trahern, CMA CEO. “As we welcome Tim McGraw, Paul Overstreet and The Stanley Brothers into the Country Music Hall of Fame, we celebrate not only their extraordinary achievements, but the lasting influence their music will have on future generations.”

“The new inductees each followed their own distinctive career paths, but they have one critical commonality: they have left an indelible mark on Country Music,” said Kyle Young, Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum CEO. “Louisiana native Tim McGraw has built a catalog of hits defined by emotionally resonant, thought-provoking songs, achieving more than 60 Top 10 Country hits, nearly 30 No. 1 Country singles, and a formidable acting career. Raised in Mississippi, hit songwriter Paul Overstreet has penned modern Country classics for numerous Country Music Hall of Fame members, as well as embarking on a successful recording career of his own. Hailing from mountainous southwestern Virginia, the Stanley Brothers, Ralph and Carter, were a foundational act in bluegrass whose music has influenced generations of artists in a variety of genres. Now, they will permanently be enshrined in the Country Music Hall of Fame alongside their esteemed peers and fellow pioneers.”

Paul Overstreet, Songwriter Category:

Paul Overstreet was born March 17, 1955, in Newton, MS. Connected to music through the church from an early age, his songwriting instinct arrived early. As a small child he would listen to Country radio while his mother ironed, hearing the architecture of songs before he could read. He loved Hank Williams Sr., Marty Robbins, Johnny Horton, and Elvis Presley.

Overstreet left Mississippi at 18, eventually landing in Nashville after seeing Tanya Tucker and Johnny Rodriguez perform in Waco, TX. He arrived with little money and few resources, sleeping in his car, on church pews, and cleaning up at gas stations. His persistence paid off. He secured a publishing deal and earned his first charting single in 1982 when George Jones recorded his “Same Ole Me,” taking it to No. 5 on the Billboard Country chart.

That momentum led to his first No. 1, “I Fell in Love Again Last Night,” recorded by The Forester Sisters. Then Don Schlitz asked Overstreet to write with him. Their partnership produced “On the Other Hand,” Randy Travis’ first No. 1, earning the CMA and ACM Award for Song of the Year and launching one of the most important careers of the neotraditional era. They followed it with “Diggin’ Up Bones,” “Forever and Ever, Amen,” and “Deeper Than the Holler,” giving Travis four No. 1 singles across three albums. “Forever and Ever, Amen” spent three weeks atop the Billboard Country chart in 1987, won a CMA Award for Song of the Year, and took the GRAMMY for Best Country Song.

Then came “When You Say Nothing at All.” Keith Whitley took it to No. 1 in 1988. Alison Krauss revived it to the Country Top 5 in 1995 and won CMA Single of the Year. Ronan Keating rode it to No. 1 in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and New Zealand four years later, certified double Platinum in the U.K., and featured on the “Notting Hill” soundtrack. Three decades, three versions, three hits.

From 1987 to 1991, BMI named Overstreet its Country Songwriter of the Year five consecutive years. No one had done it before. No one has done it since. He topped the Country charts with The Forester Sisters, Tucker, Marie Osmond, Paul Davis, Michael Martin Murphy, Ronnie Milsap, Kathy Matthea, and The Judds, whose “Love Can Build a Bridge” earned him a second GRAMMY. As part of S-K-O, he earned a No. 1 with “I Won’t Take Less Than Your Love,” recorded alongside Tucker and Davis.

As a solo artist on RCA Nashville, four of five singles from his 1989 album ‘Sowin’ Love’ reached the Top 5 on the Billboard Country chart. His follow-up ‘Heroes’ delivered three more Top 5 hits, including his solo No. 1, “Daddy’s Come Around.” He earned three Dove Awards and extended his range well beyond earnest balladry, co-writing Kenny Chesney’s double-Platinum “She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy” in 1999 and Blake Shelton’s first No. 1, “Some Beach,” in 2004, which held the top spot for four weeks and spent 30 weeks on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.

Overstreet was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2003. His songs have amassed more than 50 million U.S. broadcast performances. He continues to write from his home studio outside Nashville, with three cuts on Billy Currington’s latest album ‘King Of The Road’ and two songs on each of Zach Top’s last two projects, ‘Cold Beer And Country Music’ and ‘I Ain’t In It For My Health’.

“First of all, as a writer, sometimes we’re faced with the task of putting into words something there aren’t really words for,” Overstreet said upon learning of his induction. “But in this case, my writer instinct didn’t have the words at all. I was in a bit of shock, total surprise. What an honor it is to be recognized for my work by such an iconic institution as the Country Music Hall of Fame.”

The Stanley Brothers, Veterans Era Artist Category:

Carter Stanley was born Aug. 27, 1925, in Dickenson County, VA. His younger brother Ralph was born Feb. 25, 1927. The brothers grew up on Smith Ridge in the Clinch Mountains, where their father sang old ballads without instrumental accompaniment and their mother played clawhammer banjo. They absorbed both traditional mountain music and the new style that would come to be called bluegrass through the Monroe Brothers, the Grand Ole Opry, and the Carter Family on radio.

After Ralph returned from Army service in 1946, the brothers formed the Clinch Mountain Boys and landed a spot on WCYB-AM radio in Bristol, VA. They cut their first records in 1947 for the Rich-R-Tone label, then moved to Columbia Records, Mercury, and King. Their sound set them apart from Bill Monroe’s from the start, building on a trio harmony structure rooted less in professional performance than in shape-note church singing. Carter sang lead with plainspoken directness. Ralph’s tenor rode above it, high and keening.

In 1958, as rock ‘n’ roll gutted the market for traditional Country Music, the brothers moved to Live Oak, FL, to headline the weekly Suwannee River Jamboree. In July 1959, they appeared at the inaugural Newport Folk Festival. That September, they recorded a new version of “I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow,” with Carter’s arrangement adding a distinctive vocal refrain around the verses. That arrangement planted the song in cultural soil where it would take root for decades.

Carter Stanley died of liver failure on Dec. 1, 1966. He was 41. Ralph kept the Clinch Mountain Boys going for another 50 years, mentoring successive generations of bluegrass musicians. Among those who passed through the group as teenagers were Ricky Skaggs and Keith Whitley, both of whom went on to reshape Country Music in the 1980s.

The biggest stage of Ralph’s career arrived unexpectedly. His a cappella performance of “O Death” on the soundtrack to the 2000 Coen Brothers film ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou?’ introduced his voice to millions. The album won the CMA Award and GRAMMY for Album of the Year, while Ralph’s solo won Best Male Country Vocal Performance, making him, at 75, one of the oldest artists ever to receive the honor. Ralph Stanley died June 23, 2016, at 89.

“This moment is deeply personal for our entire family,” said the family of The Stanley Brothers. “Seeing Ralph and Carter inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame is an extraordinary honor, and something we know would have meant so much to them. Carter’s emotional lead combined with Ralph’s haunting tenor created a sound that was truly special. To see The Stanley Brothers recognized together, side by side, is incredibly meaningful for our family and a testament to a legacy that continues to live on through their music.”

Tim McGraw, Modern Era Artist Category:

For three decades, Tim McGraw has been one of the surest bets in Country Music. More than 49 No. 1 Country singles, 106 million records sold worldwide, and 13 studio albums at the top of Billboard’s Country Albums chart. Three singles, “It’s Your Love,” “Just to See You Smile,” and “Live Like You Were Dying,” were named Billboard’s top Country song of their respective years. “Something Like That” was the most played song of the decade across every single genre. His “Soul2Soul” tours with Faith Hill rank among the highest-grossing concert packages in Country Music history.

Samuel Timothy McGraw was born May 1, 1967, in Delhi, LA, and raised in nearby Start. At 11, he discovered a birth certificate revealing his biological father was Tug McGraw, a relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies. Tug denied parentage for seven years. When they finally connected, Tim changed his surname, and the identity he built became inseparable from the name he claimed. Finding that name, McGraw has said, gave him the confidence that he could accomplish bigger things.

McGraw attended Northeast Louisiana University on a baseball scholarship, but a knee injury ended those plans. He traded his high school ring for a guitar at a pawn shop and started teaching himself to play. He arrived in Nashville on a Greyhound bus on May 9, 1989, the same day Keith Whitley died. Two years playing Printers Alley followed, then a meeting at Curb Records and a record deal. His self-titled 1993 debut produced no Top 40 Country singles. McGraw often jokes it didn’t go Platinum, it went “wood.”

He trusted his gut on album two. He pulled out “Indian Outlaw” and other songs he believed in. ‘Not a Moment Too Soon’ topped both the Country and pop charts in 1994 and became the year’s best-selling Country album. His performance at Country Radio Seminar’s “New Faces” event proved he could hold an audience. He married fellow “New Faces” performer Faith Hill on Oct. 6, 1996. Their duet “It’s Your Love” stormed to No. 1 and reached the pop Top 10. Back-to-back CMA Album of the Year awards followed in 1998 and 1999.

In 2002, McGraw broke convention by recording ‘Tim McGraw and the Dancehall Doctors’ with his road band rather than Nashville session musicians, featuring an Elton John cover and vocals from Kim Carnes, Timothy B. Schmidt, and Don Henley. Then came the record that redefined his career. Tug McGraw died of brain cancer on Jan. 5, 2004, at 59. McGraw had spent the final weeks at a cabin on his farm keeping vigil. Later that year, he recorded “Live Like You Were Dying,” cutting the vocal at three in the morning, with Tug’s brother Hank weeping on a couch nearby.

The song spent seven weeks at No. 1, won GRAMMYs for Best Country Song and Best Male Country Vocal Performance, the CMA Award for Single of the Year, and the ACM Award for Single and Song of the Year. Its video closed with footage of Tug recording the final out of the 1980 World Series. That song marked a permanent shift. The albums that followed leaned into songs about time, family, and reckoning, and McGraw’s audience followed him every step of the way. His groundbreaking duet with Nelly, “Over and Over,” topped the pop charts for 11 weeks, paving the way for other Country artists to cross musical barriers.

He moved from Curb Records to Big Machine Records in 2012. “Humble and Kind,” a Lori McKenna-penned song, became a cultural moment in 2016. He built a parallel career in film, with roles in “Friday Night Lights,” “The Blind Side,” “Country Strong,” and “1883” alongside Hill and Sam Elliott. He co-wrote “Songs of America” with presidential historian Jon Meacham, which made The New York Times bestseller list.

His career totals, 11 CMA Awards and three GRAMMYs, tell the story of someone who stayed relevant without chasing trends. “Everything good in my life has come from Country Music,” McGraw said. “To represent Country Music at the highest level is the greatest honor anyone could bestow on me. I’m only worthy of it because it’s not mine alone. It also belongs to my family, to my team on and off the road, to the songwriters who trust me with their songs, to the musicians, the actors, the co-authors and to the many, many greats that came before me and taught me how it’s done.”