Post Malone Performs At Bud Light Super Bowl Show
Post Malone is calling out rising prices — even when it comes to beer.
Held on Sunday (February 8) at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, the week leading up to Super Bowl LX featured a series of parties, concerts, fan‑festivals, and more across nearby cities.
Back in December, Bud Light announced they would be hosting superstar Post Malone at an exciting pre-concert event. Because the show was sponsored by Bud Light, tickets were available exclusively through a fan contest.
If you watch the big game on Sunday (February 8), you likely noticed Post Malone’s ongoing partnership with Bud Light. He appeared in a commercial with Peyton Manning and comedian Shane Gillis, where the trio, attending a wedding, scramble to stop a keg of the St. Louis–brewed beer from rolling down a hill.
The brand’s name was even included in the title of the singer’s show. “Bud Light Presents Post Malone & Buddies,” marked a unique opportunity for fans 21 and older to experience his return to the Bud Light stage following 2025’s New Orleans spectacular.
“Getting back on the Bud Light stage during Super Bowl weekend is like coming home. I love it! We’ve got something really special planned for this year!,” Post Malone said in a December press release.

Post Malone Calls Out Insane Prices Of Beer
While Post proudly represents the company, the “I Had Some Help” singer was stunned after a fan told him a Bud Light was actually priced at $14 a can.
“I had had some young man over on this side tell me that the beers were not free,” he said, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. “$14 for a beer? … That’s absolutely unacceptable at a Bud Light show. Ladies and gentlemen, I will cover half of the tab for the entire night. So, therefore, beers will only be $7.”
He decided to lower the price to $5, even dipping to $3 at one point, assuring the audience that his gesture to cover most of the tab was “genuine.” Fans may have hoped to benefit from Malone’s offer, but the bartenders held steady at $14 per beer, a price that’s pretty common these days.
