NewsBite

Coachella mayhem boils over as festival-goers brave 12-hour lines

Coachella has officially kicked off with festival-goers describing it as “the worst organisation” they’ve ever seen and likening it Fyre Festival.

Coachella mayhem boils over as festival-goers brave 12-hour lines

Coachella kicked off with chaos on Thursday as thousands who journeyed to Indio, California, to take in the annual music festival were trapped in traffic for up to 12 hours.

Festival-goers struggled to enter the fairgrounds only to face near-record high temperatures on Friday.

The conditions were described by many attendees as being among the worst since the festival began in 1999, with some comparing this year’s Coachella to the infamously botched Fyre Festival and others demanding refunds before the first sets had even been played.

Hundreds of cars wait in a series of lines to get through a security screening area before arriving at the car camping grounds at Coachella on April 10. Picture: Andy Abeyta/The Desert Sun / USA Today Network via Imagn Images
Hundreds of cars wait in a series of lines to get through a security screening area before arriving at the car camping grounds at Coachella on April 10. Picture: Andy Abeyta/The Desert Sun / USA Today Network via Imagn Images

“This is the worst organisation I have ever seen at a festival and this is Coachella for god sakes [sic],” one person posted on Reddit.

“I made a joke earlier that I didn’t know Fyre Festival tickets were included in admission this year, but that’s honestly how I feel,” a Coachella ticket holder told Business Insider while waiting in his car on Thursday. “I feel duped.”

Festival-goers wait in a second set of lines in one of the lots to get into the car camping area. Picture: Andy Abeyta/The Desert Sun / USA Today Network via Imagn Images
Festival-goers wait in a second set of lines in one of the lots to get into the car camping area. Picture: Andy Abeyta/The Desert Sun / USA Today Network via Imagn Images
A festivalgoer poses with coca cola cans as hair rollers. Picture: Valerie Macon/AFP
A festivalgoer poses with coca cola cans as hair rollers. Picture: Valerie Macon/AFP

“People are peeing in cups,” added the man, who said he arrived around 4.30am local time.

“It’s been eight hours; people gotta do what they gotta do.”

Held at Indio’s Empire Polo Club, the two-weekend Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival this year features headliners Lady Gaga, Green Day and Post Malone, and other big-name artists such as Travis Scott, Missy Elliot, Meghan Thee Stallion and a wide assortment of up-and-coming artists.

Festival-goers are seen during the first weekend of Coachella on Friday, April 11. Picture: Amy Harris/Invision/AP
Festival-goers are seen during the first weekend of Coachella on Friday, April 11. Picture: Amy Harris/Invision/AP
Tyla, left, and Becky G perform during the first weekend of the Coachella on Friday, April 11. Picture: Amy Harris/Invision/AP
Tyla, left, and Becky G perform during the first weekend of the Coachella on Friday, April 11. Picture: Amy Harris/Invision/AP
Tyla performs during the first weekend of the festival. Picture: Amy Harris/Invision/AP
Tyla performs during the first weekend of the festival. Picture: Amy Harris/Invision/AP

The forecast high in Indio on Friday was about 38 degrees, according to the LA Times, only a few degrees shy of 41 degrees, the Indio record set in 1904.

Another attendee, who waited from 2am to 2pm before being let into the campgrounds, said the experience was “literal hell”.

DJ Provai from Irish Hip Hop trio Kneecap performs onstage. Picture: Valerie Macon/AFP
DJ Provai from Irish Hip Hop trio Kneecap performs onstage. Picture: Valerie Macon/AFP

“It was truly the worst experience ever and also super disappointing because of how much money we spent to be at an event that we really loved,” the four-time Coachella veteran told Business Insider.

“We finally got in, but no one has energy to start setting up camp.”

Countless other complaints flooded social media.

One person trapped in line deployed the lack of bathroom facilities in a video posted on TikTok, calling the experience “disappointing” and “extremely dehumanising”.

“It’s 100°F (37 degrees) outside, people’s cars are overheating, they’re running out of gas. There are no bathrooms anywhere for us to use,” she said.

Rhea Raj attends YouTube + Coachella 2025 at the Empire Polo Club, on April 11. Picture: Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images
Rhea Raj attends YouTube + Coachella 2025 at the Empire Polo Club, on April 11. Picture: Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images
Joe ‘DJO’ Keery attends YouTube + Coachella 2025 at the Empire Polo Club, on April 11. Picture: Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images
Joe ‘DJO’ Keery attends YouTube + Coachella 2025 at the Empire Polo Club, on April 11. Picture: Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images

“There’s staff porta potties people are being denied access to. People have been waiting in their car for 10+ hours. People have literally been using the bathroom behind bushes like animals, and they paid over 600 dollars to be here.”

Another TikTok creator at the festival claimed the event is understaffed this year.

“We had no one directing us once we got close to the campgrounds,” she wrote. “I even saw a staff member get taken to the medic tent for dehydration. A couple of workers I spoke to were so disoriented and out of it, I was genuinely concerned.”

Coachella organisers did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.

This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission

Originally published as Coachella mayhem boils over as festival-goers brave 12-hour lines

Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/entertainment/music/music-festivals/literal-hell-pic-sums-up-coachella-mayhem/news-story/ced89cbec19b5ca09d11ae899cb5284e