Join Fox News for access to this content
Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account - free of charge.
By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News' Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.
Please enter a valid email address.
Luke Combs wants his two kids to grow up with a normal childhood before they can understand the "very strange circumstances" that come with fame.
Combs, 35, considers himself a "stay-at-home" father – at least during the week between shows.
"I’m home four days a week, every week, full-time," the country music star said during an appearance on "The MeatEater Podcast." "Sun-up, sundown most days. Getting the kids up, changing diapers, doing baths, cooking dinners, cooking lunches, cooking breakfasts. That occupies a lot of my time, but that’s what I want."
"I want my kids’ childhoods to feel as normal as they can given the very strange circumstances that it will ultimately become."
LUKE COMBS TEARS UP OVER MISSING SON'S BIRTH WHILE ON TOUR: ‘ONE OF THE WORST DAYS OF MY LIFE’

Luke Combs wants his kids with Nicole Hocking to have a "normal" childhood. (Getty Images)
To create that childhood for his kids, Combs and his family live in a normal home.
"We live in a 2,000-square-foot house. It’s two bedrooms," the musician said. "Me and my wife have a room, and the boys share a room. We’re always close together, we’re always tight in there."
The most normal thing Combs can teach his kids is responsibility, which the "Fast Car" singer says is a priority in his household.
"The living room is the playroom. All the kids’ toys are in there. We let them destroy it. But every night, ‘Alright, we’re all cleaning up now,'" Combs explained. "Mom and dad are cleaning up, but to the extent that a one-and-a-half-year-old [can], he’ll get a block and bring it over. He might only pick up two things, but my two-and-a-half-year-old now, he can actually make a 5 percent dent in the cleanup. But he understands."
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

Luke Combs is mostly a "stay-at-home" parent during the week. (Getty Images)
Combs' opening up about his life at home comes after the country music star missed the birth of his second son, Beau.
"I’ll never forget the craziest day, probably, in my life – close to it," he shared during a 2024 appearance on The Zane Lowe Show. "One of the best and one of the worst days in my life at the same time."
"I probably woke up at around 8:00 a.m. or something like that, Australia time, and I had a text from my wife, and it said, ‘I’m so sorry, I really tried to not have the baby while you’re gone,’" he added. "And God, dude, it sucked."
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER

Luke Combs married his wife Nicole in 2020. (Getty Images)
Combs met his wife and mother of his two children by chance. The two first crossed paths at the 30A Songwriters Festival in January 2016 despite both living in Nashville. After returning home, Combs and Hocking shortly began dating.
"I could tell she was different than anybody I had ever met," Combs later told Nashville Lifestyles.
Hocking added, "I realized we could hang out and just be ourselves in front of each other. I could wear no makeup and be my weird self – because we're all weird, but we get to choose who to share that side of us with. We could be each other's weird in front of each other. That's when it was like, 'You know what? This guy's a keeper.'"
Combs and Hocking married in 2020 and had expanded their family by two before the end of 2023.

Luke Combs and his wife Nicole make sure to teach their sons about responsibility. (Rob Carr/Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
APP USERS CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE INSTAGRAM POST
Hocking gave birth to the couple's first son, Tex, in 2022. Shortly afterward, Combs and his wife revealed they were expecting their second child, Beau.
Hocking debuted her baby bump at the 2023 ACM awards, where Combs explained how they were preparing for two under two.
"We're getting ready. We're just in it. We're in the trenches, taping grenades. [We're] excited for the second one," he told People magazine at the time. "They're gonna be close [in age], but I feel like we'll be in practice."