Noah Kahan is set to open a deeply personal new chapter with the release of his upcoming Netflix documentary Noah Kahan: Out of Body, arriving globally on April 13. The newly unveiled trailer offers an intimate look at an artist navigating the whirlwind of global success while trying to stay grounded in the place that shaped him.
Directed by Nick Sweeney, the documentary captures Kahan at a pivotal moment in his career following the breakout success of Stick Season. Across a transformative year of sold-out tours and rising expectations, the film follows his return to Vermont, where he confronts personal struggles and searches for a renewed sense of home and creative clarity. Early reactions have been overwhelmingly positive, with the film earning the Audience Award at the SXSW Film Festival 2026 and drawing praise for its vulnerability and honesty.
The documentary arrives at a time when Kahan’s momentum shows no signs of slowing. His forthcoming fourth studio album, ‘The Great Divide,' lands on April 24 and is already shaping up to be one of the most talked-about releases of the year. The title track made an immediate impact, debuting at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 and topping multiple charts, while follow-up single “Porch Light” continued that success with a No. 1 debut on Spotify’s U.S. chart. Together, the releases signal an artist not just sustaining his breakout moment, but expanding it.
This next era will also play out on an enormous scale live. Kahan’s upcoming The Great Divide Tour has already sold over one million tickets, including a historic four-night run at Boston’s Fenway Park—making him the first artist ever to sell out the iconic venue four times. With dates spanning across North America throughout the summer, the tour promises to bring the emotional weight and scale of his new music to some of the biggest stages of his career.
At its core, ‘Out of Body' offers something more reflective than celebratory. It documents the tension between rapid success and personal identity, showing an artist grappling with what it means to move forward without losing himself. For fans who connected with the raw honesty of Stick Season, this film promises to go even deeper—pulling back the curtain on the cost of that vulnerability, and the search for balance in the aftermath.

