Coachella 2026: Justin Bieber’s Bieberchella Set Divides Fans

Justin Bieber’s Coachella 2026 set sparked backlash and praise as he played old YouTube videos onstage, dividing fans over nostalgia, effort, and intent.
Justin Bieber’s Coachella 2026 set sparked backlash and praise as he played old YouTube videos onstage, dividing fans over nostalgia, effort, and intent.

Justin Bieber just headlined Coachella for the first time. He barely moved. He barely performed. And somehow it landed somewhere between… perfect and what did we just watch?

Justin Bieber performs on the Coachella stage during the 2026 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival at Empire Polo Club in Indio, Calif., on April 11, 2026. (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Coachella)

Okay real talk — nobody knew quite what Justin Bieber was going to give us last night. For four years the man has basically vanished from live performance. No tour. No festival. Just the occasional studio session, some social media activity, and enough mystery to keep the internet genuinely guessing. And then: Coachella. The main stage. The biggest crowd the festival has reportedly ever seen, stretching all the way back to the ferris wheel.

And what did Justin Bieber do with it? He opened a laptop. Played his old YouTube videos. And sang along to himself from 2009.

Justin Bieber at Coachella 2026 (YouTube)
Justin Bieber at Coachella (YouTube)

The Set, Honestly

The internet has split into two very dramatic camps:
“This is the laziest Coachella performance of all time” vs “wait… that was actually kind of special?”

Both are being loud. Neither is completely wrong.

Look — if you came for a high-energy, hit-after-hit, perfectly choreographed set, I get why you’re annoyed. At one point it really was just him sitting down with a guitar like he accidentally wandered into the wrong gig. People left. Tweets were flying. Someone said it felt like a warm-up show. Harsh, but not entirely unfair.

But then there was the laptop moment.

The Part That Changed Everything

He started pulling up old clips — early YouTube Bieber, baby-faced, hoodie era, the beginning of it all.

Then the songs hit:

  • Baby
  • Never Say Never

And suddenly, the same crowd that looked confused five minutes ago was screaming every word like it was 2010 and side bangs were still a lifestyle.

The segment quickly turned into a full nostalgia spiral, complete with throwback clips and viral internet moments.

For some, it confirmed their criticism.

For others, it completely changed the tone of the night.

What initially looked like a scaled-back performance started to feel more like a deliberate throwback.

A nod to the platform that launched Bieber’s career back in 2009. Long before sold-out arenas, there was YouTube. And for about 20 minutes, that’s exactly where he took the crowd.

He managed to make a polo field of strangers feel like a late-night hangout with Justin Bieber.”  – Billboard

Why People Are So Split

Reactions remain sharply divided.

Some fans argue the set didn’t match the scale of the stage, questioning whether a headliner should deliver more production and energy. Others see it differently, as a more personal, even vulnerable return from an artist who has spent years navigating the pressures of global fame.

The debate has also sparked comparisons to newer artists, including Sabrina Carpenter, with some users suggesting she would face harsher criticism for a similarly low-key performance. And they’re probably right. Newer artists don’t get this kind of leeway. Bieber does — whether that’s fair or not.

Context also matters. Bieber’s relationship with his own music has been a topic of discussion, particularly around catalogue ownership and control. Revisiting those early songs, in that format, didn’t feel random to everyone watching.

The Moment That Actually Landed

Somewhere in the middle of all this, there was a quieter moment that cut through the noise.

During the acoustic section, he performed “Everything Hallelujah” and changed the lyrics in real time:
“Hailey, baby, hallelujah / Baby Jack, hallelujah.”

His voice cracked. His eyes filled. The crowd went silent.

Whatever you think about the set overall — that part was real.

He later brought out The Kid LAROI for “Stay,” giving the crowd the big moment it had been waiting for before closing with fireworks.

Why It Still Hit for Some People

For a lot of us, he’s not just some random headliner. He’s the reason we were screaming “baby, baby, baby ohhh” in our bedrooms like it was a personality trait.

He was the crush. The posters. The wallpapers.

The phase that defined an entire generation.

That’s why, despite the criticism, parts of the crowd didn’t just watch, they sang. And isn’t this the best part of a music festival?

In the end, it depends on what you wanted.

If you wanted spectacle, this probably wasn’t it.
If you were open to something messier, more nostalgic, more human, it might’ve worked.

For about 20 minutes, it felt less like a performance and more like hanging out with him.

And maybe that was the whole point.

Kylie Jenner on Instagram

Final Thought

Celebrities like Kylie Jenner, Adele, Katy Perry and Timothée Chalamet were spotted in the crowd, fully locked in — proof that whether people loved it or not, everyone was watching.

It may not go down as the most polished Coachella headline ever.

But it’s already one of the most talked about.

And that YouTube moment? That’s going to live online for a long time.

More in Celebrity Gossip