FINALLY OFFLINE

J Cole Goes All In on The Fall Off

By Chief Editor | 2/6/2026

J Cole releases The Fall-Off, his double album and final studio project. Features 24 tracks across two discs with Future, Erykah Badu, and Burna Boy.

Key Points

## The Wait Is Over J. Cole releases his highly anticipated The Fall-Off album on February 6, 2026, through Dreamville and Interscope Records as his first double album. After eight years of buildup since first teasing it on KOD's closing track "1985," The Fall-Off arrives as the seventh and final studio album by the North Carolina rapper. The 24-track double album is split into two discs that explore different eras of the rapper's life: Disc 29 tells a story of Cole returning to his hometown at age 29, while Disc 39 gives insight into his mindset as a 39-year-old man. Cole revealed that both the album's artwork and back cover were from pictures he took when he was fifteen years old. ## Drake and Kendrick Changed Everything "Two years ago, after the events that still feed the algorithm till this day, I became incredibly re-inspired. And the album slowly blossomed into a double disc as the concept expanded," Cole wrote in a post shared on X. While he didn't explicitly name Drake or Lamar, "two years ago" was obviously when the two were embroiled in what many consider the biggest rap beef of the decade. Cole also referenced the feud on his "Bronx Zoo Freestyle," rapping: "I used to be top seed / Apology dropped me way out of the top three / No problem, I'm probably my best when they doubt me." The beef fallout clearly stung, but it also provided creative fuel for what became his most ambitious project. The album features guest vocals from Future, Tems, Erykah Badu, Westside Gunn and Burna Boy. Production comes from Cole himself, T-Minus (who also executive-produced the album), Boi-1da, Vinylz, OMEN, Wu10 and more. ## The End of an Era J. Cole's The Fall-Off, which he previously teased to fans as being "a double album made with intentions to be my last," is here. Whether curtain call or intermission, Cole exits center stage, leaving a catalog — seven No. 1s, 20+ million records sold — etched in platinum. Streaming platforms lit up at midnight, with first listens dominating X and TikTok. "Cole went out swinging – this his best since 2014 Forest Hills Drive," tweeted one top commenter. Another called it "therapy session as album," praising vulnerable bars on family and faith. If this truly is Cole's farewell, he's going out on his own terms. No beef tracks, no industry politics, just 24 songs about growing up, growing older, and knowing when to walk away.

Topics: j-cole, the-fall-off, hip-hop, dreamville, final-album, double-album