On Garth Brooks Looking to Sell His Catalog for $2 Billion

So Garth Brooks is pondering the sale of his music catalog, including both his publishing and recorded music rights, all of which he’s retained sole ownership of over his career. According to The Wall Street Journal who was first to report the news, Garth’s asking price is said to be upwards of $2 billion, though that doesn’t mean that will be the eventual price.
The first question one might have is if Garth can actually fetch that kind of cash for his catalog. Though $2 billion might be too rich of an asking price, it might not be outside of the ballpark. When Sony acquired 50% of Michael Jackson’s catalog in 2024, it was for $600 million, and Jackson’s assets were said to be valued somewhere between $1.2 and $1.6 billion. Historically, Garth is certainly on that Michael Jackson level. And since he’s still living, Garth can still promote those assets and his music, and doesn’t have accusations of pedophilia to contend with.
The second most important question might be why Garth Brooks wants to sell, and why now? Brooks is famous for wanting to keep complete and total control over his intellectual property in any and all capacities. He’s refused to put his music up on streaming services, first launching his own autonomous streaming service called GhostTunes before later partnering with Amazon for exclusive digital distribution. He even sued Blockbuster Music for selling used copies of his albums.
So why sell now? The answer is that everyone with any good sense seems to be cashing out on the American economy, especially when it comes to intellectual property. With the onset of AI and the potentially catastrophic ramifications it could wreak on music and especially back catalogs, now is the time to grab whatever equity you can and call it good. Now is also the time to sell as massive corporations still have an appetite to buy up these assets, and they may never be valued higher.
Garth Brooks is also getting old. He’s 64, recently stopped his weekly podcasts, has no tour planned, and only has a few appearances scheduled for this summer. Though it might be foolish to expect a second retirement from the country music superstar, certainly Garth’s days of crushing it live or in the studio are past him.
Though it might not be as significant as the accusations against Michael Jackson or other major music stars, Garth Brooks does have a pending sexual assault lawsuit against him. Perhaps if it doesn’t work out in his favor, this could tarnish his reputation. It might be better to sell before any trial and public revelations of evidence as opposed to after. Of course, Brooks should be considered innocent until proven guilty. But even if he’s innocent, with the lower burden of proof for civil litigation, nothing is for certain.
So the next major question would be, what are the implications of a Garth Brooks catalog sale on country music itself?
Along with likely setting a record for a music catalog valuation, the sale of Garth’s musical assets might mean his music can finally see the type of late career legacy it’s been robbed of due to his insistence of keeping his digital music only in one place: Amazon. The massive retrospective popularity we’ve seen for other ’90s performers like Alan Jackson and Brooks & Dunn has eluded country music’s and American music’s most successful star because he’s recused himself from the digital music revolution with foolish, shortsighted deals.
Make no mistake about it: for decades Garth Brooks was one of the greatest marketing geniuses in music history. But coming out of his retirement, he was like the old general always trying to fight the last war instead of the one currently on the battlefield, thinking exclusivity was the way to leverage the most money from consumers, doubling and tripling down on physical product, box sets, and the Compact Disc stocked in big box stores as opposed to recognizing the realities of streaming, or even social media and song clipping.
George Strait has remained significantly more relevant than Garth Brooks over the last few years via his viral TikTok moments with “Carrying Your Love With Me” and “Check Yes Or No” opening his music to new generations of fans, while Garth is distributing his new albums in box sets exclusively available at Bass Pro Shops.
Perhaps the only way Garth Brooks gets out of the corner he’s backed himself, his music, and his legacy into is a massive sale, opening his catalog up to everyone. And make no mistake about it, that catalog is absolutely critical to the popularity and legacy of country music.
Though country purists love to cite his Chris Gaines moment, or his alligator tears, or his greasy marketing schemes especially with box sets and such, the simple fact is Garth Brooks is a massively important neotraditionalist country star with perhaps the most influential catalog in country music this side of Hank Williams. It’s sale could have absolutely massive affects on the genre moving forward, especially since it remains so inaccessible to the public at the moment.
But who knows if the sale, and if wide distribution of the catalog afterwards will transpire. We’ll just have to wait and see. But it’s likely The Wall Street Journal piece was meant to stir attention and make sure any and all prospective buyers are brought to the table to give Garth’s hand stronger prospects.
Despite his rabid popularity over his career, Garth Brooks has been a polarizing character, especially from his financial-first perspective on his career. Selling his catalog for $2 billion or even something just shy of that will certainly stir up those emotions again. But it also might be one of the best things to happen to one of the most important catalogs in country music history. Generations of listeners remain disconnected from the Garth Brooks music legacy, and that gaping hole isn’t good for anyone, especially Garth.
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June 8, 2026 @ 10:35 am
Gross. Then, and now.
June 8, 2026 @ 10:59 am
One thing that I honestly believe makes his catalog valuable, and maybe he knew this, was that whoever buys it gets to release it on social media like a storm. He’d move up the streaming charts like crazy if it suddenly came out on youtube, spotify, apple music, etc… Love or hate Garth as a person, the music is good. And it’s timeless.
No way has he been making more by keeping his music siloed at amazon and Walmart. But it surely might have put him in a position to do this. Even if he gets a billion, that’s an insane amount of money for a musician. Its not like it would be tied up in stock like a bunch of billionaires.
June 8, 2026 @ 11:03 am
He has a substantial catalogue of music that has sold remarkably well. He has a good number of great songs and he is entertaining live. When he performs, he still sells out. Good luck to him.
June 8, 2026 @ 11:08 am
I’d like to see the result if it happened. I often wonder how we’d view Garth today if his music was more accessible the last two decades. I love your old general line!
My Garth fandom ran rapid from his self-titled album to about Fresh Horses. A fever pitch by the release of Ropin’ the Wind. The media storm around that album was off the charts. It kind of reminded me of this recent run for Ella with “Chosin’ Texas.”
June 8, 2026 @ 11:37 am
It’s simple. Cash out now and his kids dont have to worry anything about what to do with his music when he’s gone.
June 8, 2026 @ 12:05 pm
We know that squabbling heirs derail how estates are handled.
Ask Conway Twitty.
June 8, 2026 @ 11:59 am
Funny, I just went through all his albums again, from the first through Scarecrow. Apple had a way, years ago, for you to take your CDs and add them to iTunes, so my Garth albums are still in my phone even though I don’t pay for Amazon Music.
Anyway, he’s one of the greats. Never much cared for the marketing or the tears, but the music has always been fire.
June 8, 2026 @ 12:09 pm
Garth’s legacy has been negatively impacted by his refusal to ply his music on every streaming service. His quest for most sales is like searching for El Dorado. Gold is everywhere. The only person who searches for the fabled lost city does so for his amusement. No one really cares, in the age of Spotify, if Garth outsells The Beatles.
Dislike Garth all you want. The man made some great country music during his peak. If he wants to maintain his proper standing, he needs his music in 90s country playlists.
June 8, 2026 @ 12:43 pm
You forgot to mention this one fact:
If this goes through, then you won’t have to read the false name Beyonce when you search for who the richest country music star is.