After years away from the spotlight, Fetty Wap is stepping back into the music scene with something to prove, not only to fans, but to himself.
The New Jersey native is officially launching his Nostalgia Tour on June 6 in Atlantic City, marking his first tour since being released from federal prison in January. The tour, which runs through December with stops in cities like Asbury Park, Boston, Atlanta, and Los Angeles, celebrates not only his catalog of hits but also the evolution of an artist entering a new chapter.
“I got to the point in my life where like ‘679’ is gonna be ‘679.’ ‘My Way’ is gonna be ‘My Way,’ ‘Trap Queen’ is gonna be ‘Trap Queen,’” Fetty Wap said. “To try to remake that is kind of hard. So, I’m just like, let me try to create another sound.”
That new sound is reflected in Zavier, his fourth studio album released on March 27. The 17-track project is his first since returning home and showcases a more mature version of the Grammy-nominated musician. A sound shaped by experience, accountability, and growth.
“For me, it was like keep my best foot forward, keep pushing,” he said. “Don’t let anything that I’ve just been through define me as a person, as an artist, as a creative.”
While music remains at the center of his comeback, Fetty Wap’s focus has expanded far beyond the studio.
He was born with congenital glaucoma, an experience that now fuels his advocacy and outreach. Over the past several months, he has visited schools and spoken with young people about perseverance, bullying, and self-acceptance. His message is simple but powerful: Confidence comes from within.
“You’re always gonna hear something negative. You can’t dodge that. You can’t escape that. But how you view it is what you bring into your life,” the artist stated.
That message recently took on deeper meaning during a visit to Philadelphia, where Fetty Wap supported a glaucoma awareness walk for a young child named Baby Hayze. Diagnosed at just four months old, Hayze has already undergone major eye surgery and continues to fight through serious complications.
The story hit close to home for Fetty, who shares a similar diagnosis. Showing up wasn’t about publicity; it was about connection.
“I’m just proud to be able to do that for somebody. To give somebody that confidence that I gave myself back then," he said.
That sense of purpose is also reflected in the way he views his fans, many of whom have stood by him through every phase of his career. From viral TikTok moments to sign language interpretations of his music, his audience continues to grow in meaningful ways.
“I’m happy that I have enough fans that actually want to see me enough to go on tour,” he said. “A lot of people don’t give the fans the credit—because of them, there will be no tour.”
With a major tour, new music, and a highly anticipated welcome-home celebration at Summer Jam, Fetty Wap’s summer is packed. But for him, success is no longer defined by chart-topping hits alone. Instead, it’s about impact, growth, and legacy.
“I don’t wanna just be remembered for one thing,” he said. “I don’t want them to carve in stone ‘oh Fetty Wap was cool for saying 1738.’ I wanna have multiple legacies; whenever I meet somebody they have a different story to tell about me.”
And for Fetty Wap, that story is still being written.