Rascal Flatts Lyrics — by Popularity
231 songs · Page 1 of 5
| 1 | What Hurts the Most |
| 2 | Life Is a Highway |
| 3 | Bless the Broken Road |
| 4 | My Wish |
| 5 | Here Comes Goodbye |
| 6 | Fast Cars and Freedom |
| 7 | Feels Like Today |
| 8 | These Days |
| 9 | Take Me There (live in Concert From Nissan live Sets) |
| 10 | I Melt |
| 11 | Me and My Gang |
| 12 | Unstoppable |
| 13 | I Won’t Let Go |
| 14 | I Feel Bad |
| 15 | Pieces |
| 16 | Stand |
| 17 | Here |
| 18 | Love You Out Loud |
| 19 | Words I Couldn’t Say |
| 20 | I’m Movin’ On |
| 21 | Easy |
| 22 | Why |
| 23 | Winner at a Losing Game (live in Concert From Nissan live Sets) |
| 24 | Banjo |
| 25 | Cool Thing |
| 26 | Why Wait |
| 27 | Summer Nights |
| 28 | To Make Her Love Me |
| 29 | Here’s to You |
| 30 | Come Wake Me Up (single edit) |
| 31 | Ellsworth |
| 32 | Yes I Do |
| 33 | Where You Are |
| 34 | Forever |
| 35 | Then I Did |
| 36 | The Day Before You |
| 37 | Love Who You Love |
| 38 | This Everyday Love |
| 39 | He Ain’t the Leaving Kind |
| 40 | When the Sand Runs Out |
| 41 | Summer Nights (live in Concert) |
| 42 | No Reins |
| 43 | While You Loved Me |
| 44 | Help Me Remember |
| 45 | Close |
| 46 | Once |
| 47 | Like I Am |
| 48 | Holes |
| 49 | Still Feels Good |
| 50 | Break Away |
Rascal Flatts Albums
Singles
About Rascal Flatts
Rascal Flatts was an American country trio formed in Columbus, Ohio in 1999 who became one of country music's most successful crossover acts by blending traditional country with pop sensibilities and soaring harmonies. Their signature sound featured Gary LeVox's powerful lead vocals alongside Jay DeMarcus and Joe Don Rooney, creating anthemic ballads like "Bless the Broken Road" and "My Wish" that dominated both country and pop charts. The group's polished production and emotional delivery helped bridge the gap between country and mainstream audiences, with hits like their cover of "Life Is A Highway" introducing them to even broader demographics. Over their 22-year career, Rascal Flatts sold over 23 million albums and became synonymous with the glossy, radio-friendly country-pop sound that defined much of 2000s country music before disbanding in 2021.