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HomeMUSICBluesfest Announces 2026 Return Following Record Post-COVID Attendance

Bluesfest Announces 2026 Return Following Record Post-COVID Attendance


Australia’s iconic Bluesfest has officially confirmed its return in 2026 following one of its strongest years post-COVID, bolstered in part by emergency support from the New South Wales Government’s Contemporary Music Festival Viability Fund.

Held over the Easter long weekend, Bluesfest 2025 drew more than 109,000 attendees across five days, its highest attendance since 2019, and the third-biggest turnout in the festival’s 35-year history. The milestone comes just months after festival director Peter Noble hinted that the event might be the final edition, citing ongoing economic strain across the live events sector.

Among this year’s lineup were The Pierce Brothers, the reformation of The Beards, Kim Churchill, Nahko, Fools, Eric Stang, RY X, Sweet Talk, 19-Twenty, Roshani, WILSN, and Clarence Bekker.

“We’re the top-selling festival in the country, and we’ve worked hard to get here,” Bluesfest Director Peter Noble said.

That sentiment shifted in part due to the NSW Government’s $2.25 million lifeline distributed across five festivals. Bluesfest, along with Listen Out, Field Day, Lost Paradise, and Yours and Owls, each received up to $500,000 in funding through the initiative, designed to help festivals navigate rising costs related to insurance, freight, currency exchange, and shifting ticket-buying habits.

“The post-COVID era has been a financial nightmare for music festivals in NSW,” said Minister for Music and the Night-time Economy John Graham. “The government needed to step in to save the furniture, and the feedback is that this fund has helped some of these festivals survive.”

“From Bluesfest where I’ve been this weekend, through to Listen Out and Lost Paradise – people of all ages love the outdoor music festival experience and the artists they discover. We can’t afford to lose that cultural experience because the festivals can’t afford to pay their rising bills.

“The festival circuit a vital part of the live music industry which employs almost 15,000 people. It’s too important to lose, that’s why we’re backing festivals with emergency funding and reforms that bring down their costs.”

Head of Sound NSW Emily Collins added, “The funding is providing critical support to iconic festivals and helping ease the burden of a rapidly changing landscape. We’re proud to be supporting great festivals to continue delivering world-class music experiences for the people of NSW.”

The second round of funding from the Contemporary Music Festival Viability Fund opens May 1, ahead of the 2025–2026 summer season. Eligible festivals can apply on an as-needs basis.



This story originally appeared on Billboard

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