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How to Build Your Perfect NXNE Schedule With FEST App

As NXNE returns to Toronto this June, the most important stage might be the five-inch one in your hand.

How to Build Your Perfect NXNE Schedule With FEST App

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Every festival-goer knows the moment. It's 9:40 pm, you're packed into a crowd of thousands, and two artists you love are about to play at opposite ends of the site. Set times changed an hour ago. Your friends are somewhere near the food trucks. For decades, the only way through this was a crumpled paper schedule and a little luck.

Multiply that moment across a whole weekend, hundreds of artists, dozens of venues, and you have the exact problem the last few years of festival technology set out to solve. Quietly, it's been reshaping the live-music business from the ground up.

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The hardest part of a festival like Toronto's NXNE isn’t deciding who to see – it’s figuring out how to make it across the city without missing the sets you actually care about.

That’s where FEST comes in.

The festival app is powering NXNE’s digital experience this year from June 10-14. It’s a centralized way to plan your schedules, discover artists, navigate venues and stay updated throughout the week. Instead of juggling Instagram posts, screenshots, PDFs and changing set times, everything lives in one place.

Download FEST for NXNE on iOS or Android here.

Here’s how to use it before and during NXNE.

From Paper Schedules to Personalized Itineraries

The earliest festival apps were basically digital flyers: a lineup and a map you could pinch to zoom. What's replaced them feels closer to a personal concierge.

A good festival app today lets you build your own schedule, star the artists you can't miss, and get a nudge fifteen minutes before a set, or the second a stage time moves. When those features are done right, people actually live in the app all weekend, and it's always the same handful of tools they reach for most: set reminders, the interactive map, and alerts that show up exactly when they're needed.

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That changes something fundamental about the experience. A festival used to be one schedule everyone shared. Now it's tens of thousands of individual itineraries, each one built around the music a particular person showed up for. Personalization stopped being a marketing word and became something you can feel on the ground.

Discovery Doesn't End When the Gates Open

For festivals built around discovery, the app does something even more valuable. It surfaces the artists you didn't know you came to see.

This is where the fan experience and the festival's own mission line up. An event like NXNE, with more than 300 artists across over 30 venues, has always been about discovery, a self-described "launchpad for the next wave" that helped break acts from Lizzo to Daniel Caesar before the rest of the world caught on. But 300 artists across 30 venues is exactly the kind of beautiful chaos that paper can't handle.

Friction Disappears

You're looking for a 9 p.m. show, you spot who's playing the club two blocks over, you tap to hear a preview, and you've added them to your night in a few seconds. The festival's whole curatorial bet, “trust us, this band you've never heard of is worth your evening”, finally has a way of reaching you that matches the ambition behind it.

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For 2026, NXNE has chosen FEST App (festapp.io) as its official festival app — a platform that already powers the digital experience for more than 70 festivals worldwide, from POP Montréal to Festival d'été de Québec, to Spain's Rototom Sunsplash. The instinct is the same one driving the lineup itself: meet fans where their attention already is, and make saying "yes" to something new effortless.

Tickets, Schedules and Entry On the Same Screen

A festival ticket used to live in five places at once: an email confirmation, a wallet app, a screenshot on the lock screen, a printed QR code somewhere in a bag, the festival's own portal. By the time fans reached the venue, they were already scrolling.

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FEST App pulls all of that into one place. NXNE 2026 attendees can add their festival ticket directly inside the app, alongside the schedule they've built and the artists they've saved. At the door, entry happens from the same screen they used to plan the night. For a multi-venue festival like NXNE — where fans aren't scanning in once, but across dozens of venues over five nights — that consolidation matters more than at a single-stage event. Every minute lost hunting for a confirmation email is a minute lost in line.

The Data Dividend For Organizers and Sponsors

For the people running the show, the app is also the clearest window they've ever had into what fans actually want.

Every starred artist, every schedule clash, every map pin someone taps is a signal. That information is changing how organizers book talent, lay out their sites, and plan for crowds — and it's finally giving sponsors the thing they've always wanted from live events: proof. Instead of handing a partner a vague headcount, organizers can show real engagement. Festival sponsorship stops being a leap of faith and starts being something you can measure.

That shift is also rewriting what sponsorship looks like on the ground. Brand activations. The lounges, the installations, the photo moments, the sampling zones that increasingly define the festival footprint used to live or die on foot traffic and word of mouth. Now they live on the app.

A featured pin on the festival map, a push notification when a brand-led experience opens for the day, a dedicated page where fans can find what's happening at a partner's space: all of it is exactly what FEST App is built to host. For sponsors, an activation is no longer a passive presence in the corner of a site. It's a destination fans can find, save, and return to — with every interaction tied back to data the brand can actually use.

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A Community Behind the App

What separates FEST App from a traditional event app is the community layer behind it. The FEST Crew (festapp.io/crew) is a global network of festival-goers who contribute to listings on festapp.io — adding missing artists, updating schedules, publishing lineups, and keeping festival data accurate for everyone on the platform.

For NXNE, that means more accurate data and faster updates before the gates open. For festival-goers, it means moving between events (NXNE in June, MUTEK in August, festivals abroad later in the summer) inside the same ecosystem instead of downloading a new app every time.

The tools are getting easier to reach, too. FEST (festapp.io/organizers) lets an organizer stand up a full mobile app (lineup, schedule, map, ticketing, push notifications, an audio player, and discovery pages built to be found in search) in a matter of minutes, with a free tier that puts it within reach of independent and emerging festivals rather than just the big players. When the tooling gets that accessible, a 500-person warehouse show can offer the same polished experience as a 90,000-person field.

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NXNE 2026 Starts in Your Pocket

The headliner will always be the headliner. The crowd, the sound, the collective roar when the bass drops, none of that is going anywhere, and none of it should.

But the festival has grown a second layer underneath all of that. An invisible infrastructure that decides whether you find the band that becomes your new favorite, whether you make your set on time, whether the day flows or falls apart. For NXNE 2026, that layer has a name: FEST App.

When the festival lights up Toronto from June 10 to 14, the most consequential thing happening won't be on any of the 30-plus stages. It'll be in 30,000 pockets, turning a sea of strangers into thirty thousand people each having, in their own way, the best night of their summer.

NXNE and Billboard Canada are both owned by ArtsHouse Media Group (AMG).

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Neil Young at David Suzuki Foundation Concert in Vancouver
Christopher Edmonstone/David Suzuki Foundation

Neil Young at David Suzuki Foundation Concert in Vancouver

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