Floating Points, Honey Dijon and Joy Orbison are leading next year’s Field Day 2026 line-up – check out the full list of acts announced so far below.
The festival, now in its 18th year, will see the acts play on Saturday May 23 2026. Joining them will be a world-exclusive jungle set from RAM Records co-founder Andy C.
Also on the line-up are Manchester-based DJ Interplanetary Criminal, Amsterdam’s KI/KI, vocalist, plus producer and DJ Eliza Rose. There’s also a DJ set from Gabriels.
Check out the full first wave of acts announced below. You can sign up for pre-sale tickets for the event here, which will go live on Wednesday 26 November. The festival will once again take place at London’s Brockwell Park.
Check out the line-up so far here:
This year, the festival was headlined by Peggy Gou, with Folamour, Skream & Benga, Mall Grab and Jungle (DJ set) also among those on the bill.
Back in May, the festival issued a statement after controversy over its owner’s parent company.
After 50 artists including Massive Attack and Brian Eno signed an open letter to Field Day, asking it to distance itself from global investment firm KRR, the parent company of Field Day’s owner Superstruct Entertainment, 11 artists pulled out of the festival.
This is because the firm includes stakes in weapons manufacturing companies, the Coastal GasLink pipeline, and multiple Israeli corporations that operate in occupied Palestinian territories (via MixMag).
In response, Field Day issued a statement in which it acknowledged that people were feeling “hurt and angry” but explained that partnering with Superstruct helped secure the future of the festival.
After the message received criticism from festivalgoers, Field Day issued another statement on Instagram in which it apologised for not explaining “in full” the position of the Field Day team themselves or addressing “legitimate concerns about investments in Israel by KRR.”
The statement continued: “We would like to say, clearly and directly, that we stand with the people of Gaza and support the peaceful aims of the Palestinian civil organisations and everyone working tirelessly to give them a voice.”
Field Day then urged for an “immediate end to military action and occupation” as well as “the provision of vital aid in Gaza,” before reiterating that the team had no knowledge of KRR’s investment in Superstruct last year.
The festival added that “everyone is welcome” regardless of nationality, race, religion, gender or sexuality, before adding “Free Palestine” at the end of the statement.

























