Australia’s Bluesfest 2026 Is Canceled, Appoints Liquidator

BRISBANE, Australia — Bluesfest 2026 is down and out.

The beloved Easter long-weekend festival had previously-announced a lineup led by Split Enz; Parkway Drive; Sublime; Earth, Wind & Fire, and others, and was coming off a particularly strong edition in 2025, which was initially billed as its “last” hurrah.

As it stands, 2025 will remain the final party. The bite of rising costs associated with putting on the show, along with “softer ticket demand” and “international uncertainties” have torpedoed this year’s camping fest, and a liquidator has been tapped.

“After 36 years as Australia’s most awarded festival, Bluesfest has made the difficult decision not to proceed with the 2026 event. We are proud of what we have achieved – the music, our artists, the busking competition, our staff, our community, and everyone who has been part of the Bluesfest journey,” reads a statement.

​“Rising production, logistics, insurance and touring costs, together with a more challenging environment for major live events, mean it is not possible to deliver the festival to the standard audiences, artists and partners expect.”

​A liquidator has been appointed to “manage all financial matters, including vendor and partner obligations,” the message continues.

As previously reported, last year’s show gathered about 109,000 attendees over its five days, the best result since the pre-pandemic 2019 edition, and good enough for a top three all-time result for Bluesfest, which opened its gates for the first time in 1990.

Bluesfest had seeingly weathered the storm, in every sense. The pandemic wiped out the 2021 edition. The next year, a last-minute cancellation due to a public health order from the NSW Government. Then, in 2022, a return to business and upwards of 105,000 ticket sales. A solid return for a mudfest – thanks to the intervention of Mother Nature. The Tyagarah site, north of Byron Bay, a picturesque beach town in northern New South Wales, flooded weeks before showtime, and again on the eve of the action.

Attendance for 2024 was down to about 65,000. Bluesfest director Peter Noble announced 2025 was the swansong for this long-running event. Tickets, predictably, sold out.

Then, the 2026 show was announced.

Noble got roasted online for his change of heart, but in an interview with this reporter, the veteran impresario suggested he was exhausted from the growing challenges with putting on the show, and that “I didn’t want to do it anymore.”

Earlier, Noble had described the festivals landscape in these parts as an industry facing an “extinction event.” Not every event will survive. “People are doing it tough in Australia right now. And they’re not going out as much as they did,” he remarked in mid-2024. The numbers check out. Bluesfest reported 60,000-65,000 attendees that year, down from a pre-COVID average of about 85,000.

Bluesfest, initially scheduled for April 2-5 at the Byron Events Farm, is the latest to festival to fall on hard times. In recent months and years, the likes of Rolling Loud Australia, Esoteric Festival, Caloundra Music Festival, Splendour in the Grass, Groovin the Moo, Listen Out and others have paused their events, or disappeared entirely from the calendar.

“For more than three decades, Bluesfest has brought extraordinary artists and audiences together in Byron Bay while also driving significant tourism and economic activity for the Northern Rivers and New South Wales,” remarks Noble in a separate statement, issued early Friday afternoon, local time.

“This makes the decision incredibly difficult. After careful consideration, we concluded we could not proceed in a way that would meet the standard our audiences, artists and partners expect.”

Ticket holders, including parking pass customers and campers, will be contacted directly by the appointed liquidator, according to the Bluesfest statement. Additional information regarding the process for submitting claims and any potential refund arrangements will be shared in due course.

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