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The Seattle area’s biggest 2026 summer music festivals to go to | Entertainment

Story Center by Story Center
June 15, 2026
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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The Seattle area’s biggest 2026 summer music festivals to go to | Entertainment

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The broader Seattle-area festival landscape has seen some attrition in recent years, with Day In Day Out, THING and Watershed among those taking up residence in the wristband graveyard. (May they forever ring in our ears.)

Nevertheless, the summertime show goes on with an increasingly EDM-heavy slate, perhaps a sign of the financial times. Here are eight preeminent music festivals on deck for the sunny season.

Queer/Pride Festival

This perennially popping Pride month block party returns to Capitol Hill with a full slate of drag stars and musical performances from actor/singer Keke Palmer, explicit Miami rapper JT (of City Girls fame), New York hip-hop artist Junglepussy and Chicago-reared house queen Honey Dijon. Featured June 26-27: “Ru Paul’s Drag Race” showcases with personalities like Sasha Colby, who’s no stranger to street fests on the Hill after her cameo during Chappell Roan’s electrifying set at Capitol Hill Block Party two years ago.

June 26-28; 11th Avenue between East Pike and East Pine streets; single-day tickets start at $70, three-day passes start at $208; 21-and-older; queerpridefestival.com

Beyond Wonderland

Dance music has thumped its way into center stage at the Gorge Amphitheatre, anchored in part by this annual big-tent EDM festival, which took over as the heir to the long-running Paradiso in 2021. In typical fashion, this year’s lineup features a full slate of heavyweight disc jockey/producers including house great Kaskade, dubstep kingpins Zeds Dead, Black Tiger Sex Machine, Fisher, Sub Focus, Liquid Stranger and Woodinville-based Seven Lions. At the end of last year, the atmospheric bass lord dropped his latest album, “Asleep in the Garden of Infernal Stars,” a dizzying amalgamation of melodic dubstep, celestial trance and progressive house.

June 27-28; Gorge Amphitheatre, 754 Silica Road N.E., George; tickets start at $260 (two days), camping starts at $193; 18-and-older; pnw.beyondwonderland.com

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BLASTFEST

With the most blissful vibes of any of Seattle’s major music festivals, this fourth-year Afrobeats event has been a hit with the Pacific Northwest’s African diaspora and lovers of the catchall genre of West African pop music blending dancehall, hip-hop, R&B and other genres. The 2026 edition brings one of Afrobeats’ biggest stars, Wizkid, while expanding its scope with Kendrick Lamar collaborator Mustard and Jamaican dancehall/reggae singer Shenseea.

July 18; Seattle Center, 305 Harrison St., Seattle; tickets start at $112.50; 21-and-older; blastmusicfest.com

Timber! Outdoor Music Festival

Greater Seattle’s family-friendliest music festival, this community-oriented event is the best excuse to have a summer weekend retreat in the lush Snoqualmie Valley. The deftly curated lineup taps the phenomenal Reyna Tropical — who sublimely blend myriad Latin diaspora styles — Bay Area R&B soother Lady Wray, garage rockers Frankie and the Witch Fingers, Indigenous punk rippers Dead Pioneers, Seattle experimental jazz drummer/producer Kassa Overall and a host of PNW faves.

July 23-25; Tolt-MacDonald Park, 31020 N.E. 40th St., Carnation; $70-$105 single-day passes, $208 weekend passes (kids 12 and younger free), $64 camping; timbermusicfest.com

Day Trip Festival

After location-hopping its first two years, this urban EDM festival has settled into its home at Gas Work Parks, bringing booming bass lines and a flock of colorful raver kids to one of the city’s preeminent parks for the third consecutive summer. British tech house lord Cloonee headlines a bill featuring Vintage Culture, BLOND:ISH, ChaseWest and others. Pre- and postparties the night before and after allow for a build-your-own-festival experience.

Noon-9 p.m. July 25; Gas Works Park, 2101 N. Northlake Way, Seattle; tickets start at $130; seattle.daytripfest.com

Capitol Hill Block Party

After shaving off a day in 2025, Seattle’s forever-young party of the summer returns to its three-day format, headlined by synth-pop heavy hitters Muna — a Block Party match made in queer-joy heaven — still-buzzing indie rockers Wet Leg and “No Broke Boys” remixer Disco Lines. (With Tinashe also playing a DJ set Aug. 8, could a cameo be in order?) Other notables include indie-pop draws Magdalena Bay and Parcels, R&B singer Amber Mark and comedian/rapper/internet guy/DJ Zack Fox. Don’t sleep on indie rockers Momma, electro-charged R&B artist Rochelle Jordan and Casi — the noisy new electro-punk/rap-metal duo of Enumclaw bassist Eli Edwards and Xayvien Young.

Aug. 7-9; 1122 E. Pike St., Seattle; single-day tickets start at $131, two-day passes start at $210, three-day passes start at $268; 21-and-older; capitolhillblockparty.com

Bass Canyon

Since launching his bass-lovers’ dream fest in 2018, only Dave Matthews Band has played the Gorge more times than Canadian dubstep juggernaut Excision. The Bass Canyon founder is on deck for multiple sets throughout the weekend, including a back-to-back with Los Angeles duo Slander. Other bass music big names include Nghtmre, Illenium (playing back-to-back with a mystery artist), Boregore, ATLiens, Ray Volpe and others.

Aug. 14-16; Gorge Amphitheatre, 754 Silica Road N.E., George; tickets start at $366, camping starts at $193; 18-and-older; gorgeamphitheatre.com

Bumbershoot

Seattle’s most storied music festival returns to Seattle Center with clear-cut headliners in transcendent hardcore heroes Turnstile and Death Cab for Cutie, making their first Bumbershoot appearance since 2016. On June 5, the homegrown indie rock giants dropped their sterling new album, “I Built You a Tower,” lyrically fueled by Ben Gibbard’s recent divorce. Other highlights include experimental R&B artist Blood Orange, alt-country crooner Orville Peck, indie rock songsmith Lucy Dacus, Olympia-formed punk greats Bikini Kill and more.

Sept. 5-6; Seattle Center, 305 Harrison St., Seattle; single-day tickets start at $91, two-day passes start at $156 (kids 12 and younger free with add-on ticket); bumbershoot.com

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.yakimaherald.com ’

Tags: entertainment
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