No New “FairWell Fest” for 2026


Major independent country mega festival FairWell Fest in Redmond, Oregon will not be returning in 2026. There’s also good indication that it will not be returning at all. The message posted earlier this week on their website reads, “FairWell Festival will not be returning in 2026. We’re incredibly grateful for the memories, the community, and everyone who made these past three years at the Deschutes County Fairgrounds so special!”

Though the post doesn’t say it will never return, they’ve also deactivated their Facebook and Instagram accounts, which is a good indication it’s probably done. Promoted by C3 Presents out of Austin, TX, FairWell Fest was one of a select handful of country megafestivals that catered more specifically to country and Americana music not heard on mainstream country radio.

When FairWell Fest was first announced, it stirred some controversy locally. As Saving Country Music reported in 2023, the festival led to the independent festival Wild Hare in Canby, Oregon being cancelled, and threatened other Oregon-based festivals such as the Jackalope Jamboree in Pendleton, and Big Ponderoo in Sisters. Both of these festivals are moving forward in 2026 (both the last week of June), and both are events worth attending.

2025’s FairWell Fest also directly competed on the same weekend with another major independent country music festival, Under The Big Sky Fest in Whitefish, Montana, despite a decent distance between the two.

One thing was for sure, FairWell Fest pulled together some of the biggest lineups in all of independent country music. In 2025, headliners were Sturgill Simpson and Tyler Childers, with Dwight Yoakam, Cody Jinks, and Sierra Ferrell on the undercard. The first year (2023) saw the Turnpike Troubadours, Zach Bryan, and Willie Nelson headline. With three stages total, the lineups were stacked top to bottom.

Wyatt Flores performing at FairWell Fest 2023


But along with putting pressure on Oregon’s established festivals, FairWell Fest was commonly a logistical nightmare. The first year for Zach Bryan’s set, the event was so dramatically oversold, patrons who paid large sums for tickets were pushed to the wings where the sound was very poor. There was also a lack of shade on the fairgrounds site. Traffic after the fest was also a nightmare, with some waiting until after 3:00 am to exit.

Some improvements were made in subsequent years. But similar to one of C3 Presents’ other megafest—the Two Step Inn in Georgetown, TX—long lines for entry and for essentials like bathrooms and food resulted in generally disfavorable experiences for exorbitant ticket prices for lineups you couldn’t take in fully due to the three-stage setup.

Also in 2025, booking Treaty Oak Revival turned out to be problematic as patrons threw cans at the stage and themselves, and became disruptive according to festival goers. And being in such a remote area, the festival must have been a logistical difficulty for C3 Presents to put on. Big headline names are also harder to come by when it comes to filling out festivals in 2026.

Does the end of FairWell Fest mark a dwindling in the vigor for the independent country music universe that it catered to? That’s inclusive at this point. Ultimately, experiences matter, not just lineups and big names.

Coming out of the pandemic, people wanted to feel the pulse of large crowds once again. Now as a recessionary economy sets in for America’s young adults, and both older and younger folks are favoring more manageable and laid-back festival experiences, it turns out those smaller but still talent-rich Oregon festivals FairWell Fest threatened or doomed were the ones that had the better approach.

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