Project Glow releases 2026 set times ahead of May 30–31 return to RFK

Project Glow has released its 2026 schedule for May 30–31 at RFK Festival Grounds, letting attendees plan around three stages and headline electronic acts.

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Tyler Brooks
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Entertainment writer covering Hollywood, streaming platforms, and award seasons. Twelve years reviewing film and television for major outlets.
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Project Glow releases 2026 set times ahead of May 30–31 return to RFK

has released its 2026 set times and the full daily schedule ahead of the festival’s return to RFK Festival Grounds in Washington, D.C., for a two-day run on May 30–31.

The timetable spreads performances across three stages—Eternal, Pulse and Secret Garden—and names a string of high-profile electronic acts set to appear over the weekend. , , and an B2B slot anchor the bill alongside Mau P, Disco Lines, Wooli and Cloonee, giving attendees clear headline markers as they map their weekends.

The immediate payoff for ticketholders is practical: with the schedule now public, attendees can begin plotting must-see sets and flagging conflicts across the three stages before gates open. That planning window matters because the festival runs on a tight two-day calendar, and several of the billed acts are likely to overlap on adjacent stages.

Project Glow’s release lists where artists will appear across Eternal, Pulse and Secret Garden but stops short of publishing minute-by-minute allocations for every act. The published schedule supplies the weekend framework—who is playing and on which stage—while leaving some finer-grain details unaccounted for in the initial posting.

That gap is the practical tension: fans can decide which artists they want to prioritize, but they do not yet have a complete minute-level running order to eliminate all conflicts. The absence of full per-act start and end times means attendees will still need to make real-time choices once final stage times land or as sets overlap on site.

For travel and lodging decisions, however, the information released today is decisive. Project Glow’s May 30–31 dates and the trio of stage locations give out-of-town visitors the bones of a plan—arrival windows, which stage to set base camp near, and which headline acts to build an itinerary around. The presence of marquee names such as Eric Prydz and Porter Robinson on the roster will shape arrival times for many fans.

On the weekend itself, the Eternal, Pulse and Secret Garden stages will serve different programming roles across the two days, and the published schedule already allows festivalgoers to apportion their time. Whether preferring the progressive house lean of Prydz, the emotional peaks associated with Porter Robinson, or the heavier bass dynamics of Excision and Sullivan King, attendees can now prioritize and trade off accordingly.

Organizers’ timing of the release—days before the festival—puts planning power directly into ticket-holders’ hands while preserving flexibility for any late adjustments. That balance matters to anyone juggling travel, work and two full days of electronic music in a single weekend.

What comes next is straightforward: Project Glow takes place May 30–31 at RFK Festival Grounds in Washington, D.C. Attendees should use the newly published schedule to set their must-see list now; the remaining unanswered item is the complete minute-by-minute running order for every artist, which fans will need to finalize exact clashes and back-to-back plans ahead of or during the festival.

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Entertainment writer covering Hollywood, streaming platforms, and award seasons. Twelve years reviewing film and television for major outlets.