Stagecoach 2026 livestream: Prime Video, Twitch and full schedule guide

Learn where to stream Stagecoach 2026, which headliners are included, and the complete two-channel Amazon Music schedule for April 24–26, 2026

The desert’s big country weekend, Stagecoach 2026, runs April 24–26, 2026 in Indio, California, and Amazon Music is streaming most of the festival across multiple platforms. The broadcast covers the three headliners — Cody Johnson, Lainey Wilson and Post Malone — and dozens of supporting sets on two simultaneous feeds that pull from the festival’s seven stages. If you can’t make it to the Empire Polo Club, the livestream option is the closest thing to being there, but there are a few caveats about timing and availability that viewers should note.

Before you settle in, remember that on-site set times and the streaming start times frequently differ; the home feed may start an act earlier or later than the set listed at the venue. Variety flags that there is no overnight re-broadcast and no rewind on the feed in one report, while Time Out and the festival materials indicate an international rebroadcast window and daily rebroadcasts for viewers outside the U.S. Either way, plan to consult the streaming timetable rather than the on-site schedule to know exactly when to tune in.

Where and how to watch

Amazon is providing the official coverage via Prime Video, Twitch and the Amazon Music app (now available on Fire TV). The streams begin at 3:00 p.m. PT each day and run on two channels that combine content from Stagecoach’s stages into parallel feeds. On the Amazon Music app you can switch between the feeds and, on supported devices, follow multiple stages. The festival also offers an international rebroadcast window (reported to begin at 9:00 a.m. for global viewers), plus interactive elements such as fan polls and QR codes linking to artist merch and playlists.

What’s included in the streams and who’s missing

The lineup available at home includes the weekend’s main headliners — Cody Johnson (Friday), Lainey Wilson (Saturday) and Post Malone (Sunday) — plus many notable acts spanning country and crossover genres. Expect appearances from Brooks & Dunn, Little Big Town, Brooks & Dunn, Hootie & the Blowfish, Third Eye Blind, Diplo, Pitbull, Ludacris and rising stars like Bailey Zimmerman and Warren Zeiders. One high-profile streaming highlight: Ella Langley — currently one of the top-charting U.S. recording artists — is scheduled on the stream at 6:50 p.m. on Friday, which is 20 minutes after her in-person set. A notable omission from the home schedule is the band Journey, who play the Mustang tent Saturday night but do not appear on the official streams.

Full streaming schedule

Friday, April 24 — channel 1 and channel 2

Channel 1 (starts 3:05 p.m. PT): 3:05 — Noah Rinker; 3:25 — Adrien Nunez; 4:00 — Ole 60; 4:25 — Avery Anna; 5:00 — Chase Rice; 5:55 — Nate Smith; 6:50 — Ella Langley; 7:50 — Bailey Zimmerman; 8:55 — The Red Clay Strays; 10:00 — Cody Johnson; 11:30 — Diplo. Channel 2 (starts 3:05 p.m. PT): 3:05 — Neon Union; 3:25 — Larkin Poe; 4:00 — Marcus King Band; 4:50 — Lyle Lovett; 5:35 — BigXthaPlug; 6:30 — Noah Cyrus; 7:00 — Wynonna Judd; 8:00 — Counting Crows; 8:50 — Sam Barber; 10:00 — Dan + Shay; 10:45 — Diplo ft. Juicy J; 11:05 — Rebecca Black; 11:45 — Dillstradamus. Use the stream listings to confirm exact start times because the stream queue may shift from the venue clocks.

Saturday, April 25 — channel 1 and channel 2

Channel 1 (starts 3:10 p.m. PT): 3:10 — Kevin Smiley; 3:30 — Braxton Keith; 4:05 — Redferrin; 4:40 — Corey Kent; 5:35 — Teddy Swims; 6:20 — Treaty Oak Revival; 7:20 — Little Big Town; 8:20 — Riley Green; 9:30 — Lainey Wilson; 11:00 — Pitbull. Channel 2 (starts 3:10 p.m. PT): 3:10 — S.G. Goodman; 3:30 — Lane Pittman; 4:05 — Benjamin Tod; 4:40 — Michael Marcagi; 5:20 — Willow Avalon; 5:55 — Billy Bob Thornton & The Boxmasters; 6:40 — Chase Matthew; 7:20 — Charles Wesley Godwin; 8:10 — Bush; 9:10 — Gavin Adcock; 10:20 — Two Friends. These feeds mix country mainstays with pop and rock crossover sets in the evenings.

Sunday, April 26 — channel 1 and channel 2

Channel 1 (starts 3:05 p.m. PT): 3:05 — Jake Worthington; 3:25 — Ink; 4:00 — Bayker Blankenship; 4:25 — Hudson Westbrook; 5:00 — Kameron Marlowe; 5:55 — Brett Young; 6:50 — Warren Zeiders; 7:50 — Brooks & Dunn; 8:50 — Hootie & the Blowfish; 10:00 — Post Malone; 11:30 — Ludacris. Channel 2 (starts 3:05 p.m. PT): 3:05 — Adam Sanders; 3:25 — Amos Lee; 4:00 — Cameron Whitcomb; 4:40 — Zach John King; 5:15 — Max McNown; 6:00 — The Wallflowers; 6:55 — Eli Young Band; 7:25 — Ty Myers; 8:25 — Third Eye Blind; 9:25 — Wyatt Flores; 10:30 — Loud Luxury; 11:20 — DJ Pauly D. The stream lineup covers 40 sets on Friday and roughly 39 sets on Saturday and Sunday across the two channels.

Tips for viewers

To get the most from the broadcast, check the streaming listings on the platform you plan to use because the start times listed online are the ones the home audience will see. If you are outside the U.S., look for the international rebroadcast windows noted by the festival. There are also official watch party locations (including Lainey Wilson’s Bell Bottoms Up in Nashville, Posty’s Bar in Nashville, Common Country in NYC, Shindig’s Country Kitchen in Riverside and Not My First Rodeo in Scottsdale) and curated Amazon Music Originals playlists and artist releases that coincide with the festival. Finally, expect the feeds to be two-channel, live-forward coverage — so tune to the correct feed at the correct time to avoid missing a set.

Condividi
Alessia Conti

Lifestyle editor, 10 years in women's magazines and entertainment.