Zac Brown wrote this song with Wyatt Durette along with the band's bass guitarist John Driskell Hopkins and musician Shawn Mullins. According to Brown, Durette phoned him at six o'clock one morning during his 30th birthday vacation in Key West, and provided him with the idea for the song. In the song, the male narrator describes a relaxing trip to Mexico from Georgia, or "G-A." Throughout the verses, he tells of the "pretty señoritas" and "muchachas" that he encounters, as well as the copious alcoholic drinks that he consumes. In the final pre-chorus, the narrator runs out of money, returns home and continues to relax there.
Edits
The version released to most radio stations replaces the line "I got my toes in the water, ass in the sand" from the chorus with "toes in the sand" and edits out the line "roll a big fat one" from a later chorus. These edits were met with different responses from those involved with the creation of the song. Durette said, "If people like the song, they are going to buy it and they end up with the real version. So while it’s not the greatest, it’s not the end of the world either," while Brown said that he would rather have the song not played at all than have an edited version played.
The song has been met with positive critical reception, usually with comparisons to the musical styles of Jimmy Buffett. Mark Deming, in his Allmusic review of the album, compared "Toes" and "Where the Boat Leaves From" to Buffett's material, saying that both songs were "devoted to the joys of getting buzzed and playing music in some seaside locale with good weather." Pierce Greenberg of Engine 145 also compared it to "Where the Boat Leaves From," saying that "Toes" had a "more refreshing look at the same 'let’s get away to the beach' theme" and "one fiesta of a chorus." On the same site, Sam Gazdziak gave the song a thumbs-up, saying that it had " more realistic scenario" in comparison to Kenny Chesney's Buffett-influenced songs. Billboard critic Ken Tucker said that it was a "tropical treat" in Buffett's tradition, and Bobby Peacock of Roughstock said that it "may just be one of the best summer songs to hit country radio in quite some time."
Commercial success
Toes became the band's third single to reach the Top 5 on U.S. BillboardHot Country Songs chart and their second to reach number one. The song also became the band's third consecutive single to peak in the Top 30 on the Billboard Hot 100. The single was certified Platinum by the RIAA on February 22, 2010, and by May 2015, sales had reached over 3 million copies in the United States. As of July 2015, the song has sold 3,024,000 copies in the U.S.