Coachella Weekend 2 set times
Coachella released Weekend Two set times for April 17–19, shifting a few high‑profile slots — Sabrina Carpenter is scheduled for 9 p.m. Friday on the main stage, Justin Bieber for 11:25 p.m. Saturday, and Karol G will close Sunday at 10:10 p.m. (pitchfork.com) (timeout.com). Local reporting also noted minor timing changes from Weekend One, so several prime‑time placements differ from last weekend’s runs (kesq.com).
Coachella’s second weekend now has its own timetable, with several marquee acts moved from their first-weekend slots for the April 17 to April 19 run in Indio. (pitchfork.com) The biggest prime-time placements include Sabrina Carpenter at 9 p.m. Friday on the Coachella Stage, Justin Bieber at 11:25 p.m. Saturday, and Karol G closing Sunday at 10:10 p.m. (pitchfork.com) Local reporting said Weekend 2 includes “slight changes” from Weekend 1, including an earlier Friday start for Carpenter and a later Sunday start for Karol G. KESQ also reported a new addition: Kacey Musgraves joins Saturday’s lineup. (kesq.com) That matters at Coachella because the festival runs the same lineup over two consecutive weekends, but set times, guests, and tent placements can still shift after the first crowd test. Coachella’s official site lists the 2026 dates as April 10 to April 12 and April 17 to April 19. (coachella.com) Weekend 2 also arrives after a first weekend that produced its own surprise-booking model. The Orange County Register reported that Musgraves fills a visible Mojave slot on Saturday, with no replacement named for Not for Radio, while DJ Rezz canceled her appearance. (ocregister.com) For fans not in Indio, Coachella says the official YouTube livestream returns for April 17 to April 19, with seven stages streaming live. The festival’s livestream page says coverage for Weekend 2 is available through its YouTube partnership. (coachella.com) So the headline for Weekend 2 is not a new lineup so much as a recalibrated one: same three-day festival, different clock, and a few new pressure points in the night. (pitchfork.com)