AMAs 2026 Nominations List: Taylor Swift Leads with 8 Total! | 2026 AMAs, 2026 American Music Awards, AMAs, Longform, Taylor Swift | Celebrity News and Gossip | Entertainment, Photos and Videos


The nominations for the 2026 American Music Awards have been revealed!

This year, Taylor Swift has the most nominations with eight total, followed by Morgan Wallen, Sabrina Carpenter, Olivia Dean and sombr, who all received seven nominations.

Fan voting is now open via VoteAMAs.com and the @AMAs Instagram handle in all of the categories at this time. You can vote up until Friday, May 8, 2026 at 11:59:59am PT, with the exception of Social Song of the Year and Tour of the Year, which will remain open through the first 30 minutes of the AMAs broadcast!

Queen Latifah is set to host the big show this year, which will be held in Las Vegas on May 25 on CBS!

Head inside to see the full list of nominations…

Scroll down to see the nominees..

Artist of the Year

Bad Bunny
Bruno Mars
BTS
Harry Styles
Justin Bieber
Kendrick Lamar
Lady Gaga
Morgan Wallen
Sabrina Carpenter
Taylor Swift

New Artist of the Year

Alex Warren
Ella Langley
KATSEYE
Leon Thomas
Olivia Dean
sombr

Album of the Year

AM I THE DRAMA? — Cardi B
111xpantia — Fuerza Regida
Mayhem — Lady Gaga
I’m The Problem — Morgan Wallen
The Art of Loving — Olivia Dean
MUSIC — Playboi Carti
Man’s Best Friend — Sabrina Carpenter
So Close To What — Tate McRae
The Life of a Showgirl — Taylor Swift

Song of the Year

“Ordinary” — Alex Warren
“Choosin’ Texas” — Ella Langley
“Golden” — HUNTR/X (EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami)
“Folded” — Kehlani
“MUTT” — Leon Thomas
“I’m The Problem” — Morgan Wallen
“Man I Need” — Olivia Dean
“Manchild” — Sabrina Carpenter
“back to friends” — sombr
“The Fate of Ophelia” — Taylor Swift

Collaboration of the Year

“All The Way” — BigXthaPlug and Bailey Zimmerman
“Gone Gone Gone” — David Guetta, Teddy Swims and Tones And I
“What I Want” — Morgan Wallen and Tate McRae
“Stateside” — PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson
“Amen” — Jelly Roll and Shaboozey

Social Song of the Year

“No Broke Boys” — Disco Lines and Tinashe
“Illegal” — PinkPantheress
“Sally, When The Wine Runs Out” — Role Model
“CHANEL” — Tyla
“Lush Life” — Zara Larsson

Best Music Video

“Gnarly” — KATSEYE
“Berghain” — ROSALÍA, Björk and Yves Tumor
“Manchild” — Sabrina Carpenter
“The Fate of Ophelia” — Taylor Swift
“CHANEL” — Tyla

Best Soundtrack

F1 The Album — Various Artists
Hazbin Hotel: Season Two — Various Artists
KPop Demon Hunters — Various Artists
Wicked: For Good — Various Artists
Wuthering Heights — Charli xcx

Tour of the Year

Cowboy Carter Tour — Beyoncé
Grand National Tour — Kendrick Lamar and SZA
The Mayhem Ball — Lady Gaga
Oasis Live ’25 Tour — Oasis
Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour — Shakira

Breakout Tour

American Heart World Tour — Benson Boone
The Sincerely, Tour — Kali Uchis
Submarine Tour — The Marías
Am I Okay? Tour — Megan Moroney
Even in Arcadia Tour — Sleep Token

Breakthrough Album of the Year

The Art of Loving — Olivia Dean
I Barely Know Her — sombr
Midnight Sun — Zara Larsson

Best Throwback Song

“What’s Up” — 4 Non Blondes
“Rock That Body” — Black Eyed Peas
“Iris” — Goo Goo Dolls

Best Vocal Performance

“Ordinary” — Alex Warren
“Golden” — HUNTR/X (EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami)
“Abracadabra” — Lady Gaga
“WHERE IS MY HUSBAND!” — RAYE
“Die on this Hill” — SIENNA SPIRO

Song of the Summer

“Fever Dream” — Alex Warren
“iloveitiloveitiloveit” — Bella Kay
“SWIM” — BTS
“Choosin’ Texas” — Ella Langley
“American Girls” — Harry Styles
“The Great Divide” — Noah Kahan
“Stateside” — PinkPantheress and Zara Larsson
“Homewrecker” — sombr
“Dracula” — Tame Impala and JENNIE
“Elizabeth Taylor” — Taylor Swift

Best Male Pop Artist

Alex Warren
Benson Boone
Ed Sheeran
Harry Styles
Justin Bieber

Best Female Pop Artist

Lady Gaga
Olivia Dean
Sabrina Carpenter
Tate McRae
Taylor Swift

Breakthrough Pop Artist

KATSEYE
SIENNA SPIRO
Zara Larsson

Best Pop Song

“Ordinary” — Alex Warren
“Golden” — HUNTR/X (EJAE, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami)
“Man I Need” — Olivia Dean
“Manchild” — Sabrina Carpenter
“The Fate of Ophelia” — Taylor Swift

Best Pop Album

Mayhem — Lady Gaga
The Art of Loving — Olivia Dean
Man’s Best Friend — Sabrina Carpenter
So Close To What — Tate McRae
The Life of a Showgirl — Taylor Swift

Best Male Country Artist

Jelly Roll
Luke Combs
Morgan Wallen
Riley Green
Shaboozey

Best Female Country Artist

Ella Langley
Kelsea Ballerini
Lainey Wilson
Megan Moroney
Miranda Lambert

Best Country Duo or Group

Brooks & Dunn
Old Dominion
Rascal Flatts
Treaty Oak Revival
Zac Brown Band

Breakthrough Country Artist

Sam Barber
Tucker Wetmore
Zach Top

Best Country Song

“All The Way” — BigXthaPlug and Bailey Zimmerman
“Choosin’ Texas” — Ella Langley
“Just In Case” — Morgan Wallen
“Happen To Me” — Russell Dickerson
“Good News” — Shaboozey

Best Country Album

I Hope You’re Happy — BigXthaPlug
Cloud 9 — Megan Moroney
I’m The Problem — Morgan Wallen
Restless Mind — Sam Barber
What Not To — Tucker Wetmore

Best Male Hip-Hop Artist

Don Toliver
Kendrick Lamar
Playboi Carti
Tyler, The Creator
YoungBoy Never Broke Again

Best Female Hip-Hop Artist

Cardi B
Doechii
GloRilla
Sexxy Red
YKNIECE

Breakthrough Hip-Hop Artist

EsDeeKid
Monaleo
PLUTO

Best Hip-Hop Song

“ErrTime” — Cardi B
“NOKIA” — Drake
“wgft” — Gunna, Burna Boy
“Rather Lie” — Playboi Carti and The Weeknd
“Take Me Thru Dere” — YKNIECE, Quavo, Metro Boomin and Breskii

Best Hip-Hop Album

AM I THE DRAMA? — Cardi B
OCTANE — Don Toliver
The Last Wun — Gunna
MUSIC — Playboi Carti
MASA — YoungBoy Never Broke Again

Best R&B Artist

Bruno Mars
Chris Brown
Daniel Caesar
PARTYNEXTDOOR
The Weeknd

Best Female R&B Artist

Kehlani
Summer Walker
SZA
Teyana Taylor
Tyla

Breakthrough R&B Artist

Leon Thomas
Mariah the Scientist
Ravyn Lenae

Best R&B Song

“I Just Might” — Bruno Mars
“It Depends” — Chris Brown and Bryson Tiller
“Folded” — Kehlani
“MUTT” — Leon Thomas
“BURNING BLUE” — Mariah the Scientist

Best R&B Album

The Romantic — Bruno Mars
SWAG — Justin Bieber
MUTT — Leon Thomas
HEARTS SOLD SEPARATELY — Mariah the Scientist
Finally Over It — Summer Walker

Best Male Latin Artist

Bad Bunny
Junior H
Peso Pluma
Rauw Alejandro
Tito Double P

Best Female Latin Artist

Gloria Estefan
KAROL G
Natti Natasha
ROSALÍA
Shakira

Best Latin Duo or Group

Clave Especial
Fuerza Regida
Grupo Firme
Grupo Frontera
Julión Álvarez y su Norteño Banda

Breakthrough Latin Artist

Beéle
Kapo
Netón Vega

Best Latin Song

“NUEVAYoL” — Bad Bunny
“Ojos Tristes” — benny blanco, Selena Gomez, The Marías
“Marlboro Rojo” — Fuerza Regida
“ME JALO” — Fuerza Regida
“LATINA FOREVA” — KAROL G

Best Latin Album

111xpantia — Fuerza Regida
Tropicoqueta — KAROL G
Mi Vida Mi Muerte — Netón Vega
DINASTÍA — Peso Pluma and Tito Double P
Lux — ROSALÍA

Best Rock/Alternative Artist

Deftones
Linkin Park
The Marías
Sleep Token
Twenty One Pilots

Breakthrough Rock/Alternative Artist

Geese
Gigi Perez
sombr

Breakthrough Rock/Alternative Song

“The Great Divide” — Noah Kahan
“Up From the Bottom” — Linkin Park
“back to friends” — sombr
“Ensenada” — Sublime
“Dracula” — Tame Impala

Breakthrough Rock/Alternative Album

Even in Arcadia — Sleep Token
I Barely Know Her — sombr
Deadbeat — Tame Impala
Breach — Twenty One Pilots
With Heaven On Top — Zach Bryan

Best Dance/Electronic Artist

Calvin Harris
David Guetta
Fred again…
ILLENIUM
John Summit

Best Male K-Pop Artist

ATEEZ
BTS
ENHYPEN
Stray Kids
TOMORROW X TOGETHER

Best Female K-Pop Artist

aespa
BLACKPINK
ILLIT
LE SSERAFIM
TWICE

Best Afrobeats Artist

Burna Boy
MOLIY
Rema
Tyla
WizKid

Best Americana/Folk Artist

Lord Huron
The Lumineers
Mumford & Sons
Noah Kahan
Tyler Childers





Source link

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get our latest articles delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, we promise.

Recent Reviews


If you do not owe any tax for a year and you are certain of it, can you just file an income tax return that reports all zeros for income and lists the amount you paid to the IRS that you want refunded? I’ll refer to this as a “zero income-tax return.”

This is a valid question, as many taxpayers do not owe or have to pay income taxes. Our income tax burden is primarily paid by those in the middle class and upper class. The majority of taxpayers may still file tax returns to obtain refunds of amounts they paid in to the IRS by wage withholdings or even refundable tax credits, such as the child tax credits. In these cases, it might make sense to file a zero income-tax return and just list the amount of tax paid that is to be refunded. This would be consistent with the push for the IRS to simplify the tax reporting process for taxpayers. This would even make the Trump-era postcard tax return idea possible for most Americans. And some states, such as Texas with its franchise tax, have a similar concept. Texas calls it a no-tax due form.

But does Federal law allow for this? Will the IRS accept a zero-income tax return? The recent Varela v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2024-85, provides an opportunity to consider this question and explore the potential consequences of filing a zero-income tax return when no tax is due.

Facts & Procedural History

The taxpayer filed a Form 1040EZ, Income Tax Return for Single and Joint Filers With No Dependents, for the 2017 tax year. The return reported zero wages and zero taxable income. It listed the standard deduction and sought a refund of $1,373, comprising federal income tax, Social Security tax, and Medicare tax withholdings that had been paid to the IRS.

Attached to the Form 1040EZ were four Forms 4852, Substitute for Form W-2, each reporting zero wages or income.

Third parties had filed information reporting forms with the IRS indicating that the taxpayer had received $11,311 in wages and $1,436 in cancellation of indebtedness income. These amounts appear to be about the same amount as the allowable standard deduction and personal exemption for 2017.

The IRS’s automated underreported program no doubt detected the discrepancy and sent the taxpayer a CP2000 notice.

The matter ended up in the U.S. Tax Court and the parties settled the case agreeing that no tax was due. The IRS assessed a $5,000 penalty under Section 6702(a) for filing a frivolous tax return for the zero income-tax return the taxpayer had filed. The taxpayer disputed the penalty, and the dispute ended up back before the U.S. Tax Court.

Duty to File Returns & IRS Processing

To understand whether one can simply file a zero income-tax return, we have to first consider the rules that require tax returns to be filed and that require the IRS to process them.

Section 6011 generally requires any person liable for any tax to make a return according to the forms and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Treasury. There are exceptions and other forms can be used, even though the IRS does not like it. Section 6001 then imposes an obligation for taxpayers to make returns and keep and provide books and records to the IRS on request.

Complementing this duty is the IRS’s obligation to process tax returns. Section 6201(a) requires the IRS to assess all taxes imposed by the tax code. This includes the duty to process and record the tax returns filed by taxpayers. The IRS is not, however, required to process a document that is filed that is not a tax return.

What Counts as a Tax Return?

The question of what constitutes a tax return has been the subject of numerous court cases. Beard v. Commissioner, 82 T.C. 766 (1984), aff’d, 793 F.2d 139 (6th Cir. 1986) is the leading case for this.

In Beard, the tax court established a four-part test for determining whether a document qualifies as a valid return. Under the “Beard test” a document is a tax return if:

  1. The document purports to be a return
  2. It is executed under penalties of perjury
  3. It contains sufficient data to allow calculation of tax
  4. It represents an honest and reasonable attempt to satisfy the requirements of the tax law

This “Beard test” has been widely adopted by federal courts.

Under the Beard test, a tax return that reports zero income may fail the third and fourth prongs of this test, especially if the IRS has information indicating that the taxpayer had taxable income.

Counterintuitively, it is often the taxpayer who is asserting that a document that was filed is not a tax return. This can be an “out” for taxpayers who file frivolous tax returns when the IRS imposes frivolous tax return penalties or even a fraudulent tax return, for example. The IRS asserted the frivolous return penalty in the present case. Reading the court opinion, it appears that the taxpayer did not raise the no-return argument as a defense.

The Frivolous Return Penalty

As this case shows, the IRS may be inclined to impose a frivolous return penalty if a taxpayer files a zero income-tax return. Section 6702(a) authorizes the IRS to impose this penalty and explains that the penalty is $5,000 for each frivolous tax return that is filed.

For this penalty to apply, the tax return has to be “frivolous.” Naturally, taxpayers and the IRS often do not agree as to whether documents are “frivolous.” That was the dispute in this case.

The courts have generally said that a tax return is considered “frivolous” if:

  1. It does not contain information on which the substantial correctness of the self-assessment may be judged, or contains information that on its face indicates the self-assessment is substantially incorrect; and
  2. The position taken is either based on a position the IRS has identified as frivolous or reflects a desire to delay or impede the administration of Federal tax laws.

In the present case, the tax court found that filing a zero-income return when third-party information indicated substantial income met these criteria.

The tax court did not accept the taxpayer’s argument that the penalty cannot be imposed when no tax was due. The tax court emphasized that a taxpayer can be penalized for filing a frivolous return even if they ultimately owe no tax, as the penalty is based on the nature of the return itself, not the final tax liability.

The Section 6673 Penalty

In addition to the frivolous return penalty, for matters that are before the tax court, the IRS can also ask the court to impose a penalty as a sanction.

Section 6673 authorizes the tax court to impose a penalty of up to $25,000 when a taxpayer institutes or maintains proceedings primarily for delay or takes frivolous or groundless positions. This is separate from the frivolous filing penalty.

In this case, the IRS asked the tax court to impose a Section 6673 penalty for the zero income-tax return. The tax court opted not to impose the penalty given that the court had not previously warned the taxpayer not to make frivolous filings–i.e., the taxpayer did not file the tax return as part of the litigation, so the tax court had not admonished him to not make a similar filing. That is what this penalty is for–it is not for pre-litigation tax return filings–even zero income-tax return filings.

Even then, while the tax court declined to impose the penalty, it warned the taxpayer that such penalties could be imposed in future cases if he continued to pursue similar arguments. This highlights the potential escalating consequences for taxpayers who repeatedly file zero-income returns during the pending litigation or make other frivolous tax arguments when before the tax court.

Takeaway

This case shows why taxpayers should still take the time to complete their tax returns when no tax is due. Simply reporting no income and listing the amount of the refund, is convenient for taxpayers, it is not a process that is accepted by the IRS. Those who do this may find themselves in a situation like the taxpayer in this case, having to spend a considerable amount of time and resources responding to and working with the IRS and then having to defend against a frivolous return penalty.

Watch Our Free On-Demand Webinar

In 40 minutes, we’ll teach you how to survive an IRS audit.

We’ll explain how the IRS conducts audits and how to manage and close the audit.  



Source link