Tomorrowland 2026 Drops Full Consciencia Lineup and Timetable

Lena Brandt
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Tomorrowland reveals the full Consciencia lineup for its 20th edition, with Calvin Harris headlining both weekends and an exclusive Avicii tribute experience

Tomorrowland has released the full lineup and timetable for Consciencia, its 20th anniversary edition, with the festival set to open its gates in less than one month. Hundreds of artists from more than 40 nationalities will perform across 16 stages, with visitors from over 200 countries uniting in a celebration of music, imagination, and human connection. Weekend 1 runs July 17 to 19 and Weekend 2 runs July 24 to 26 at De Schorre Recreation Park in Boom, Belgium. The full lineup and timetable are live now at tomorrowland.com.

Calvin Harris, one of the most iconic figures in the history of dance music, makes his long-awaited Tomorrowland debut this edition, his last appearance on a Tomorrowland stage dating all the way back to TomorrowWorld in 2013. He headlines the Mainstage on Sunday of Week 1 and Saturday of Week 2. The wait has been over a decade in the making, and the context around it makes the timing feel right. Harris’ 2026 has already included major festival confirmations across Europe, and his Tomorrowland Mainstage slot is the biggest of all of them.

The Mainstage Debuts and the Avicii Tribute

The Mainstage will also welcome a number of highly anticipated debuts, including Belgian hard techno sensation Novah, German dance phenomenon Marlon Hoffstadt, and British drum and bass icons Chase and Status. Novah’s presence on the Mainstage is a particular statement. The Antwerp-born artist completed 168 shows worldwide in 2025 alone, and her track “Papi” surpassed 5.5 million streams while her Tomorrowland Music release “ACID” solidified her position as one of the most exciting names in modern techno.

Fifteen years after his legendary Mainstage debut, Tomorrowland 2026 will pay tribute to Avicii, the artist who helped bring electronic music to a global audience and shaped the sound of a generation. At the heart of the celebration is the exclusive “Avicii Tribute Experience,” an immersive installation featuring unique audiovisual storytelling, never-before-seen footage, personal stories, and, for the first time outside Stockholm, original items from Avicii’s personal collection. The tribute also includes newly remastered versions of his iconic sets from 2012, 2014, and 2015 in Spatial Audio.

Generations, Belgian Heritage, and the Full Picture

From ages 11 to 79, Tomorrowland spans generations like never before. Knox, just 11 years old, is the youngest DJ on this year’s lineup, while 79-year-old Cameroonian artist Eko Roosevelt Louis will make a special appearance at the Melodia stage. Louis, known for pioneering Makossa and Funky Disco sounds, will use Tomorrowland as the launch platform for a new chapter of his career.

Tomorrowland’s Belgian roots remain central to the programme. Alongside performances from homegrown stars such as Amelie Lens, Netsky, Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike, and Lost Frequencies, the festival will welcome several special local showcases. One of the most anticipated is the debut of Frank Verstraeten, better known as Mister Zillion, who will present a unique 90-minute tribute to Belgium’s legendary Zillion nightclub. More than 30 stage hostings from labels, artists, and collectives including Experts Only, Exhale, Dim Mak, and Smash The House complete a program that extends far beyond the Mainstage.

Author
Lena Brandt

Lena Brandt

Lena Brandt grew up in Hamburg in a city where the clubs never fully closed and the argument about whether techno counted as music or just noise was settled long before she was old enough to get in. She covers electronic, EDM, and club culture for Latetown Magazine, with a particular focus on the producers building scenes that exist entirely outside the festival circuit. She spent five years writing for a Berlin-based electronic music platform before relocating to the US, contributing to several dance music publications along the way. She believes the most important music being made right now is happening in warehouses with no Instagram presence and considers it her job to find it.

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