Young Miko

15 new acts added to RF26

26.03.2026Programme

Young Miko leads today’s announcement, which brings global energy, genre collisions, a string of standout Danish artists and a strong wave of new voices. More names will follow in April before the full programme is complete.

One of the fastest-rising names on the global scene is heading to Roskilde Festival this summer.

Puerto Rican star Young Miko has built serious international momentum with her mix of trap, reggaeton and Latin pop – and now you get the chance to experience her live at Roskilde Festival for her first show in Denmark.

She’s already worked with Bad Bunny, Karol G, Feid and J Balvin – and joined Billie Eilish on tour – but what really matters is what happens live. Expect a show that feels both explosive and personal, where club energy meets something raw and real.

And with around 20 more acts still to be revealed in April, the full programme is still taking shape.

Let's take a look at the rest of today’s new additions:

This should not work (but it does)

French outfit Igorrr mixes death metal, opera and electronic music in ways you wouldn’t normally expect to go together.

But live, it just clicks. Brutal riffs crash into operatic vocals and baroque melodies, shifting constantly without losing momentum. It’s chaotic, intense and strangely beautiful – the kind of show that keeps you guessing and completely locked in from start to finish.

From club darkness to new sonic worlds

UK producer Blawan brings his dark, industrial take on techno to Roskilde Festival – expect heavy beats, raw intensity and a dancefloor that pulls you all the way in.

Norway's Vilde Tuv arrives with her fluid mix of pop, folk and trance, drawing you into a sound that feels both intimate and expansive. UK group Shovel Dance Collective reshape folk traditions into something raw and immediate, where you’re right there in the middle of it.

And Bolivia-born Susobrino joins the line-up with a vibrant set connecting electronic production and Latin American rhythms – warm, rhythmic and impossible not to move to.

Two defining Danish acts

TV-2 return to Roskilde Festival for the first time in 25 years – a band that has shaped Danish pop and rock for decades and still resonates with new generations of artists and listeners.

They’re joined by Zar Paulo, one of the most talked-about bands in Denmark right now. Their sharp songwriting and growing catalogue have quickly made them a defining voice on the current scene – they will close our biggest tent stage, Arena, Saturday night.

More Danish must-hear acts

Singer-songwriter Eee Gee returns in top form with new music on the way, as well as rock legends The Savage Rose. AySay brings together Nordic and Middle Eastern influences in a sound that feels both grounded and new, while Smag På Dig Selv hit you with raw, uncompromising energy.

Satiric gabber legends Albertslund Terror Korps are back with their political bite and high-speed rave intensity, and Cuirass draw you into a darker, medieval-inspired world of storytelling and atmosphere.

A one-of-a-kind performance

Danish pop rebel Angående Mig brings a specially staged show created with Betty Nansen Teatret – something you can only experience at Roskilde Festival.

Here, music, storytelling and performance merge into an intense, close-up experience shaped by vulnerability, anger and presence. It’s designed for this exact setting – and it will stay with you long after it ends.

Programme nearing completion

With today’s announcement, the line-up now counts 159 acts. That already adds up to major headline shows, late-night parties, new discoveries and everything in between – the full Roskilde Festival experience.

But we’re not done yet.

Even with artists like Gorillaz, The Cure, Zara Larsson and Addison Rae already on the bill – alongside Clipse, EsDeeKid, Ethel Cain, Wolf Alice, Little Simz, Yung Lean & Bladee, Kneecap, Pa Salieu, Lily Allen, and Lykke Li – there’s still more to come.

Yes, that’s already quite a line-up!

Get ready for April where we will complete this year's music line-up!

Get your ticket in time

While you look ahead to April, make sure to secure your ticket – especially if you already know you’re going.

Choose a full festival ticket for access to all eight days and the complete experience, a single-day ticket for Wednesday, Thursday, Friday or Saturday, or a two-day ticket that lets you mix the days as you like. But don’t wait too long: the first ticket types are already sold out.