
Peak
29
Weeks
30
Score
2,746
Chart Year
2026
The music video premiered on July 16, 2025, and was directed by Megan Moroney and Cece Dawson.[5] In it, Moroney portrays a customer service representative at a fictional call center called Karma Now! Hotline, where she helps a heartbroken version of herself get back at her ex.[6] She enacts revenge by tracking him from her computer screen and interfering with a "magic button panel", finding subtle ways to ruin his day like making his milk go sour and his steak taste bad, until he finally caves and calls Moroney's character back while she's sitting in her bedroom, allowing her the satisfaction of turning him down
"6 Months Later" is Megan Moroney's rather sunny-sounding account of a 2019 breakup so emotionally devastating it left her "barely alive." The breezy kiss-off begins in "November, circa 2019," which gives it the pleasing feel of a historical event. From there, it plunges straight into the wreckage of a relationship gone wrong. Moroney delivers the line, "Put a hole in my heart, watched it bleed," with just enough country twang to make you forget you're listening to someone emotionally implode in real time. Just when you think it's a good old-fashioned heartbreak song - something you could reasonably cry into a whiskey glass to - the twist arrives: six months later, the ex phones up. He's been to therapy. He's found himself. He's allegedly "stable." And, naturally, he wants her back. Moroney, however, has already done the emotional heavy lifting and moved on. Rather than swoon, she dismisses him with the line: OK well… your next girlfriend will be so lucky Fans of The Office will appreciate a reference to a classic malapropism from Steve Carell's Michael Scott at the beginning of the second verse. Oh how the turns have tabled Scott meant to say, "How the tables have turned," but instead blurted out, "How the turntables." "It was kind of a Gen Z meme that's been in my brain since I watched the show in high school," Moroney told Billboard. "I don't know why that came to my brain, but it did. And then, of course, it rhymes, that's why we came up with 'willing and able' right after that." "What doesn't kill you," according to the adage, "makes you stronger." "6 Months Later" addresses that issue and seals it with a stinging punch line, "What doesn't kill you calls you six months later." It recognizes a reality that feeds plenty of country songs: The person who ends a relationship will likely have regrets. Moroney brought the "6 Months Later" hook up during a luxurious writing vacation with Ben Williams, Rob Hatch and David "Messy" Mescon. They headed off to the Bahamas on a three-story yacht with a full bar and a waitstaff in February 2025. It was the third straight year they had taken that kind of working vacation, and the first night, they mostly planned to party, though Moroney did mention her idea. "She has more vision than any writer-artist I think I've ever been in the room with," Hatch told Billboard. "In this case, she walked in and goes, 'Guys, I want this song to be the summer tempo single of the album. I want it to be called "6 Months Later," and I want the hook to be "What doesn't kill you calls you six months later.'"" They worked a bit on the chorus as the libations flowed. Moroney crafted a rough melody for that section, and her friends all chipped in, in leisurely fashion. "We were really just drinking, having a good time, not actually trying to write it," she remembered. The song came out fast the next morning, incorporating some quirky verbiage that made the song stand out. Moroney co-wrote the track with her longtime collaborator Ben Williams, along with David "Messy" Mescon (a producer better known for his work with rappers like Nicki Minaj and Rick Ross) and Rob Hatch, who has worked on such country hits as Justin Moore's "If Heaven Wasn't So Far Away" and Lee Brice's "I Don't Dance." "6 Months Later" was produced by Kristian Bush, who has been Moroney's producer since her early days in Nashville. Megan Moroney co-directed the video with CeCe Dawson. Moroney plays both a heartbroken protagonist and a confident operator at the fictional "Karma Now! Hotline," offering revenge services to the recently dumped. CeCe Dawson previously worked as the creative director for Moroney's "Am I Okay?" video. The "6 Months Later" video strikingly echoes themes from Moroney's 2023 visual for "I'm Not Pretty." Both productions lean into vibrant pastel palettes and overtly feminine aesthetics, incorporating abundant pink, vintage props, and exaggerated details that evoke a nostalgic '90s or early 2000s sensibility. Both videos highlight Moroney's talent for self-aware, comedic narrative. Each of them crafts an alternate-universe interpretation of relatable emotions, from post-breakup vindication to the complexities of social comparison. The song sets a time frame, "November circa 2019," that matches a breakup Moroney experienced in college. "She almost always has somebody in mind," Hatch observed, and the first verse treats the end of a romance as a metaphoric murder. The opening line for the chorus, the self-referencing "Hey, Meg, I think I want you back," recalls a similar move made by Miley Cyrus in the Hannah Montana song "See You Again" ("My best friend Leslie said, 'Oh, she's just being Miley'"). Moroney thought it was fun. "I think if (Cyrus') song didn't exist, I would never put my own name in a song," Moroney said. "I grew up on that kind of stuff, so it felt right to say, 'Hey, Meg.'" There's not a lot of room for country singers on MTV, but Maroney got to perform "6 Months Later" at the Video Music Awards in 2025, where her video for "Am I Okay?" won for Best Country.
Let me set you the scene November, circa 2019 Put a hole in my heart, watched it bleed You said that we were better off as strangers I was barely alive Out of six feet deep, I was five Pretty sure they called a hearse outside, okay, that's dramatic But I survived, then I survived The "Hey Meg, I think I want you back I'm a couple drinks in thinkin' it's my bad That I let you walk away and let you go" (Oh) It's a tale as old as time I guess When you couldn't care more, I couldn't care less You're a little too late to the party, heartbreaker What doesn't kill you calls you six months later Oh, how the turns have tabled All the sudden, now you're willing and able Little therapy, now you're so stable Okay, well Your next girlfriend will be so lucky To not hear "Hey Meg, I think I want you back I'm a couple drinks in thinkin' it's my bad That I let you walk away (Let you walk away) and let you go" (Oh) It's a tale as old as time I guess When you couldn't care more, I couldn't care less You're a little too late to the party, heartbreaker What doesn't kill you calls you six months later What doesn't kill you Makes you stronger and blonder and hotter Makes you wonder what you even saw in him at all What doesn't kill you always calls (Oh, sorry, I think you have the wrong number) With a "Hey Meg, I think I want you back I'm a couple drinks in thinkin' it's my bad (Thinkin' it's my bad) That I let you walk away (Let you walk away) and let you go" (Oh) It's a tale as old as time I guess (Tale as old as time) When you couldn't care more, I couldn't care less You're a little too late to the party (A little too little too late), heartbreaker What doesn't kill you calls you six months later
| Week | Chart Date | Position | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jul 5, 2025 | 30 | 96 |
| 2 | Jul 12, 2025 | 40 | 86 |
| 3 | Jul 19, 2025 | 48 | 78 |
| 4 | Jul 26, 2025 | 58 | 68 |
| 5 | Aug 2, 2025 | 58 | 68 |
| 6 | Aug 9, 2025 | 53 | 73 |
| 7 | Aug 16, 2025 | 53 | 73 |
| 8 | Aug 23, 2025 | 54 | 72 |
| 9 | Aug 30, 2025 | 51 | 75 |
| 10 | Sep 6, 2025 | 55 | 71 |
| 11 | Sep 13, 2025 | 65 | 61 |
| 12 | Sep 20, 2025 | 68 | 58 |
| 13 | Sep 27, 2025 | 56 | 70 |
| 14 | Oct 4, 2025 | 62 | 64 |
| 15 | Oct 11, 2025 | 52 | 74 |
| 16 | Oct 18, 2025 | 61 | 65 |
| 17 | Oct 25, 2025 | 46 | 80 |
| 18 | Nov 1, 2025 | 48 | 78 |
| 19 | Nov 8, 2025 | 46 | 80 |
| 20 | Nov 15, 2025 | 42 | 84 |