Kodak Black is heading deep into the heart of Texas. The Pompano Beach rapper hits Midland tomorrow night, Friday, Feb. 27, as part of his sprawling Cowboy Bill 2026 Texas Takeover Tour — a multi-city run that has been steadily building heat across the Lone Star State and shows no signs of slowing down.
The Midland stop is one of the most anticipated dates on a tour that has already proven it can move crowds fast. An earlier Dallas appearance at Headquarters sold out with just 24 hours’ notice, a moment that set the tone for everything that followed and confirmed that Kodak’s pull in the South remains as strong as ever heading into 2026.
What the Cowboy Bill Tour Is All About
The Cowboy Bill 2026 Texas Takeover Tour is more than a standard concert run — it is a statement. Billed as a deep-south meetup of Texas proportions, the tour is designed to bring Kodak’s catalog to fans across every corner of the state, from West Texas to the Gulf Coast. The energy surrounding each stop has been raw and celebratory, with bass-heavy sets, crowd chants and a performer known for making every room feel like a block party regardless of size.
The Midland show kicks off what is shaping up to be one of the busiest stretches of dates on the tour. Tickets are available through Posh, with the show expected to draw a strong turnout from fans across the West Texas region.
Kodak’s Texas Run — The Full Picture
The scope of this tour is ambitious. The Texas run includes stops in El Paso, Stephenville, San Marcos, Caldwell near College Station, Dallas, San Antonio, Houston and South Padre Island during spring break— a route that cuts across virtually every major market in the state. The South Padre Island stop, scheduled for March 19 at the Cameron County Amphitheater and Event Center, is positioned as the tour‘s centerpiece, timed perfectly for the biggest spring break gathering on the Texas coast.
Beyond Texas, the tour extends further into 2026 with additional dates including Payne Arena in Hidalgo on March 12 and Amerant Bank Arena in Sunrise, Florida on March 13. The full slate makes this one of Kodak’s most extensive live runs in recent memory.
The Man Behind the Mic
Kodak Black has built one of the most distinct careers in modern hip-hop. Born Dieuson Octave and raised in the Golden Acres housing project in Pompano Beach, Florida, he broke through in 2015 with the viral single No Flockin before signing with Atlantic Records. Kodak’s catalog since then has ranged from the Billboard chart-topper Dying to Live to stripped-back street anthems that showcase the confessional, drawl-heavy delivery that made him a regional phenomenon long before mainstream recognition arrived.
Kodak’s live show carries that same energy. Fans who have attended previous Cowboy Bill dates describe sets that run 90 minutes to two hours, packed with catalog favorites and the kind of unfiltered stage presence that turns venues into something much louder than their square footage suggests.
Adding new structure behind the scenes, Kodak recently aligned professionally with Dallas producer and manager KillShot — a pairing that became more visible to the public following that sold-out Dallas performance and signals a sharpened focus for the next chapter of his career.
Why This Tour Feels Different
The Cowboy Bill 2026 Texas Takeover Tour arrives at a moment when Kodak’s live presence is clearly resonating in ways that feel more intentional than in previous years. The Texas-specific framing, the sell-out momentum, the new management alignment and the sheer geographic ambition of the run all point to an artist who is treating this stretch of dates as something worth taking seriously.
For fans in Midland and across West Texas, tomorrow night is one of the rare chances to catch a show of this scale without making the drive to a major metro. Tickets are moving — if you have not locked in a spot yet, tonight is the time to do it.

