Traditional Country Artists: Now Is The Time to Submit to the Grammys


You might have heard back on June 12th that the Grammy Awards added a new “Best Traditional Country Album” category to the 2026 roster, and renamed the existing Best Country Album category “Best Contemporary Country Album.” For traditional country artists, their fans, and advocates, this is a huge victory. Finally, traditional country is being allowed to exist on its own as opposed to having to compete with the big pop-oriented names of mainstream country, or being relegated to “Americana.”

The Grammy’s Best Traditional Country Album definition states, “Traditional country includes country recordings that adhere to the more traditional sound structures of the country genre, including rhythm and singing style, lyrical content, as well as traditional country instrumentation such as acoustic guitar, steel guitar, fiddle, banjo, mandolin, piano, electric guitar, and live drums. It also includes sub-genres such as Western, Western Swing, and Outlaw country.”

This (hopefully) means that traditional country artists making traditional country music will get their own opportunity for nominations and awards. This also could play a big role in not just the Grammys, but in all of these bigger organizations finally recognizing the difference between contemporary and traditional country.

However, securing this new Grammy category was just the very beginning of this process. Now what needs to happen is traditional country music performers need to submit their albums to the Grammy Awards for consideration. The Grammys don’t just choose out of thin air who gets to be considered. You have to submit your work.

Wednesday, July 16th is the day that the Grammy submission process opens, and it will stay open until August 29th. The eligibility period for the 2026 Grammy Awards is August 31st, 2024, to August 30th, 2025. That means if you or your favorite artist released a country album within that period (or will in the next six weeks), they are eligible. And the Grammys state, “We encourage everyone to submit their entries as early as possible so that the Recording Academy’s Awards team can assist with any questions in a timely manner.”

Also, the submission fees go up the deeper into the submission window we go, so it pays off to submit early.

If you want to know the complete ins and outs of the Grammy submission process, you can read the Grammy’s How To Submit Music Guide. I’d love to tell you that it’s quick and painless, but unless the album was released on a label that is set up as a media company with the Grammys, or you’re a Grammy member, it might take some effort. But it’s an effort worth taking.

Long story short, Grammy members can submit their work, along with the works of others, and so can “media companies,” i.e. labels, management groups, or as the Grammys define, “a legitimate business entity whose core business function is to create, aggregate and promote audio and/or video content for commercial purposes.”

Unfortunately, the period to become a Grammy member has closed for this particular cycle. But media companies can still register from July 7, 2025 up to August 22, 2025.

If you’re an artist on a label, make sure your label is submitting your album to the Grammys. And if you think it belongs in the Best Traditional Country Album category, insist that is where it gets submitted. If you’re an individual artist but have made your own “label,” then register as a media company. And yes, there are fees to do this. But then you can submit up to five entries for free, along with paying additional fees for additional entries beyond that.

If you’re simply a fan of traditional country music and your eyes are starting to roll into the back of your head from all of this, understand you could play an important role here too. Awareness is going to be a big part of this submission process. Unfortunately, a lot of traditional country artists have tuned out of the Grammy process, feeling disenfranchised from it. You can help by telling them to tune back in since they finally have their own category.

Let’s say you’re a more local-oriented or up-and-coming traditional country artist, would love to be considered by the Grammy Awards, but are not a Grammy member, do not think you constitute a “media company.” In this case, try to find someone who is a Grammy member or a media company, and see if they can submit on your behalf. Smaller artists do win big Grammys since it’s a peer-voted, more critically-acclaimed award.

Also, Saving Country Music is here to help you as well. If you’ve released a traditional country album and want to submit it to the Grammys, reach out to Saving Country Music, and the effort will be made to match you up with someone who can submit your album on your behalf. If you’re a Grammy member or registered media company and might have available submission slots, also reach out to be matched up with deserving artists. And again, the sooner all this happens, the better since the fees are lower, and the runway is longer if there ends up being any problems.

But what if you feel like an album might not quite fit into the traditional album category, or that it sits on the bubble between traditional or contemporary country? That’s okay, make sure to submit it to the Grammy Awards anyway. Not only might it get nominated or win, the more entries the Grammys get, the healthier all country’s categories are, and the more likely the Best Traditional Country Album category will stick around indefinitely, and who knows, maybe we can also get a “Best Traditional Country Song” category in the future too.

And yes, you don’t just have to submit your album. If you think you have a Grammy-winning song, submit it to the existing “Best Country Song,” “Best Country Performance,” or “Best Country Duo or Group Performance” categories for consideration too.

This new Grammy Best Traditional Country Album category could be a very big moment for artists and performers who believe in preserving the roots of country music, but only if we follow through with it. For too long, traditional country artists have been treated like “others.” Now it’s time to step up and help give them a home.

And if you have any questions about any of this, feel free to reach out to Saving Country Music.

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