Taylor Swift Inducted Into the Songwriters Hall of Fame and Thanks Family in Emotional Speech

Taylor Swift reflected on her career and celebrated the craft of songwriting as she was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame Thursday, June 11.

Swift recalled words of wisdom actress and Steven Spielberg’s wife, Kate Capshaw, once told her: “Good and true things are easy.” The Grammy winning singer-songwriter continued, “I look back at my entire 23 year career in music, the ups and downs, the industry battles, the trials and tribulations, the tears and the cheers, and the dog piling of doubt, the criticisms of fair and unfair, the complete loss of privacy, the world tours, and the ego wars and the twists of fate, the absolute magical chaos of this path that I chose when I was too young to remember it ever being a choice at all: songwriting was the easiest thing I ever did.” Swift added, “Not because it didn’t take effort — definitely did — not that it wasn’t frustrating at times — because it could be — and not that my songwriting didn’t haunt me relentlessly until I cracked the perfect internal rhyme scheme for the third line, the second verse of the book, where my teachers called me out in class without paying attention — because that definitely happened.”

Swift recalled her parents telling her stories from her childhood of the young singer on the drive home from watching Disney movies and singing songs from the films, except she “was changing the lyrics and the melodies to be about my own life as a little kid.”

In an emotional moment during her speech, Swift said that it “couldn’t have been easy for my parents and brother to pick up and move our entire family from Pennsylvania to relocate to Nashville, so that I could hone my craft in the songwriting capital of the world.” Addressing them directly, she said, “Even though words are supposed to kind of be my thing, I will never be able to express my gratitude to you guys for doing that for me.”

Earlier in the night, Sombr, who appeared on the red carpet and posed for photos with Swift, sang a rendition of her beloved Folklore track “Cardigan” and her biting ballad, “Dear John.”

Swift, at 36, is the youngest female artist to be inducted into the prestigious institution, and the second youngest artist to earn the honor. She’s just three years older than Stevie Wonder was when he became the youngest Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee in 1983 at the age of 33.

Songwriters become eligible for the Songwriters Hall of Fame 20 years after the commercial release of their first song. Swift, unsurprisingly, was a first-ballot inductee, with her debut track, “Tim McGraw,” arriving in 2006 when she was just 15 years old. 

This isn’t the first time Swift’s been recognized by the Songwriters Hall of Fame either. Back in 2010, she received the Hal David Starlight Award, named after the late legendary lyricist (and former Hall of Fame chairman), and established to honor young songwriters at an apex in their careers. (The recipient of Hal David Starlight prize this year will be Raye.) 

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Along with Swift, the 2026 Songwriters Hall of Fame class boasts Alanis Morissette, Kenny Loggins, Christopher “Tricky” Stewart, Kiss’ Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons, Terry Britten and Graham Lyle, and Walter Afanasieff. 

Swift’s Songwriters Hall of Fame honor comes just a week after she released a new song, “I Knew It, I Knew You,” for the Toy Story 5 soundtrack. Swift co-wrote and produced the song with longtime collaborator Jack Antonoff, marking their first collaboration since 2024’s The Tortured Poets Department. Swift released her most recent album, The Life of a Showgirl, last October.

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