Good Vibes, Tequila, and Sore Feet: What Instacart Orders Reveal About Music Festivals in the Coachella Valley

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Alex Orellana

Instacart analyzed order data across 11 cities in the Coachella Valley during the 2025 spring desert festival season, which spans three weeks in April. What people put in their carts reveals a lot about how Americans prep, party, and recover from long days in the sun — and how uniquely they do it for the two distinctly different music festivals.*

 

*Purchases reflect orders placed in the surrounding Coachella Valley area. Instacart does not deliver alcohol to festival grounds.

 

Key Takeaways

  • Orders were placed 25% more often than normal during the three-week festival period, making it one of the busiest times of the year for the region.

  • Tequila was a top-selling alcohol at both festivals. It spiked over 1,200% above the national average at the pop and electronic music festival and over 1,500% at the country music festival – the largest jump of any alcohol at either event. Margaritas were having a moment – responsibly, of course.

  • There was a clear wave of “oops, I forgot” items. Body sunscreen was up 1,033% for the pop and electronic music festival, while bandages rose 405%, showing how often last-minute essentials made their way into orders.

  • Foot care emerged as a real festival need. Foot insoles and inserts rose more than 3,900% around the pop and electronic music festival and 6,000% around the country music festival — one of the largest spikes across any product category.

  • Electrolyte supplements spiked 304% at the pop and electronic music festival versus 252% at the country music festival, while sports drinks rose 58% and 37%, respectively.

The Festivals Rival Thanksgiving in Coachella Valley

The Coachella Valley doesn't just throw festivals – it throws Instacart into overdrive. Every April, the region sees a grocery surge that rivals Thanksgiving. During the 2025 festival season, orders were placed 25% more often than normal across 11 cities in the surrounding area, including Indio, Palm Desert, Palm Springs, and La Quinta. 

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The Desert Called. Tequila Answered.

During the pop and electronic music festival, unflavored tequila jumped more than 1,200% above the rest of the U.S., leading every alcohol category by a wide margin. Liqueurs, Mexican style lagers, unflavored vodka, hard seltzers, prosecco, rosé, and more all followed. The desert bar was fully stocked.

The more interesting signal is what came with the tequila. Orders containing tequila and limes in the same cart jumped 5,560% above the national average in the Coachella Valley. Add chili peppers to that combination and those orders ran 4,897% above normal.

Spicy margaritas, anyone?** The carts say yes.

**Methodology: Instacart calculated the percentage difference between 1) share of orders on the Instacart platform with tequila and limes in the same order between 4/10/25-4/20/25 in Coachella, Vista Santa Rosa, Indio, La Quinta, Indian Wells, Bermuda Dunes, Palm Desert, Thousand Palms, Sky Valley, Rancho Mirage, and Palm Springs and 2) the share of orders on the Instacart platform with tequila and limes in the same order between 4/10/25-4/19/25 in the rest of the United States.

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Avo Toast, Energy Drinks, and Survival Instincts

Green limes (120%), Hass avocados (+49%), tortilla chips (+45%), and sourdough bread (+89%) all spiked together, making chips and dips and avocado toast a top-notch snacking option (and arguably a festival food group).

Energy drinks (+67%), sports drinks (+58%), and coffee drinks (+110%) all trended up sharply. Celebration, recovery, and survival in the hot desert for three days demands a fueling plan. 

The shopping list is giving survival mode, festival edition.

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And if there's one unsung hero of festival season? Sparkling water. It topped every other beverage category in the Coachella Valley – because nothing says 'I'm thriving in 100-degree heat' like a cold LaCroix. 

Among popular sparkling water brands, LaCroix came in first, San Pellegrino second, and Sparkling Ice® third – hydration, but make it bubbly. 

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The “Oops, I Forgot” Cart

Body sunscreen (+1,033%), bandages (+405%), eye drops (+187%), toothbrushes (+149%), and razors (+116%) pointed to last-minute essentials that people may have forgotten to pack. Items like disposable cups (+143%) and pool floats (+1,492%) show that people wanted to keep the party going outside of the festival (and possibly into the pool).

And then there are the things no one thinks about until they absolutely have to. Foot insoles jumping nearly 4,000%? Turns out cowboy boots and four-inch platforms are great for a photo op but brutal for an all-day dance party. Your feet were sending a message.

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Same Lineup, Different Energy: Weekend 1 vs. Weekend 2

For the annual pop and electronic music festival, the differences between weekend 1 and weekend 2 are clear. 

Weekend 1 festivalgoers prioritized keeping the energy high (or at least trying to) by purchasing energy drinks (+45%), refueling and recovering with electrolyte supplements (+37%), juice shots (+29%), coffee drinks (+13%), and relaxing and snacking with pool floats (+19%), and guacamole (+20%).

Weekend 2 had its own vibe: pinot grigio surged 75%, false eyelashes jumped 64%, and margarita mix rose 28%. The data doesn't lie: Weekend 2 came to play. 

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Same Venue. Completely Different Carts.

Both festivals take place around the same time, at the same venue, but they play out very differently. The pop and electronic music festival leans into body sunscreen, juice shots, caffeine drinks, and electrolyte supplements, while the country music festival saddles up for tortilla chips, light lagers, spirits, and snacks like fresh fruit and veggie trays. 

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And while sore feet show up at both festivals, the country music festival pushes it further — foot insoles jump from around 3,900% at the pop and electronic music festival to over 6,000%, suggesting those cowboy boots might not be as comfortable as they look. Lucky for country music lovers, camping chairs are permitted at their festival and spike in carts, so they can take a load off. No such luck for weary pop and electronic music festivalgoers! 

Weekend 1 Carts Didn't Lie

As the valley's first weekend wrapped, Instacart data told a story — a weird, wonderful one. Compared to the same period last year, orders reflected every wind gust, protein shake, mystery bug, and last-minute glam session in real time.

  • The Coachella Valley's notorious gusts hit hard, and carts showed it: sinus rinse kits surged 223%, nasal spray climbed 46%, allergy medicine rose 58%, and duct tape — yes, duct tape — spiked 187%, suggesting some serious campsite damage control was underway.
  • Protein had its festival debut too, with creatine up a staggering 426%, protein drinks rising 35%, meat jerky climbing 33%, and protein bars up 19% — whether that was GLP-1 era prep or just fueling three days on their feet, the high-protein cart officially arrived at the festival grounds.
  • Something was apparently crawling around out there too: personal bug spray jumped 295%, insect repellent rose 91%, and rodent traps climbed 166% (make of that what you will).
  • And through all of it, glam didn't flinch — heat protection and earrings both surged 474%, eyebrow makeup rose 119%, makeup sponges jumped 187%, and curling irons were up 91%, proving no amount of desert dust was a match for a good getting-ready moment.

Methodology: Instacart calculated the percentage difference in the share of items ordered on the Instacart platform in Coachella, Vista Santa Rosa, Indio, La Quinta, Indian Wells, Bermuda Dunes, Palm Desert, Thousand Palms, Sky Valley, Rancho Mirage, and Palm Springs from 4/10/25-4/13/25 to 4/9/26-4/12/26.

Whether your festival vibe is glitter and electrolytes or cowboy boots and tortilla chips, Instacart has your pre- and post-festival cart covered — delivered to where you're staying outside the festival grounds. 🤠🌵 

 

Alex Orellana

Alex Orellana

Author

Alex Orellana is Instacart’s resident Trends Analyst. In his current role, he explores data across the company’s extensive grocery catalog, which spans thousands of categories including grocery, beauty, household essentials, and more, to uncover trends that reflect evolving consumer behavior and preferences. He's passionate about understanding how people interact with food, which serves as a powerful link to tradition, local industry, history, and culture. With more than a decade of experience working with on-demand delivery data, including his role as one of the first analysts at Postmates, Alex brings deep industry expertise to his work at Instacart. He constantly strives to help people see themselves in the data, whether it's through interactive visuals, or from transforming data into music.

Cutting tomatoes on a cutting board after grocery delivery.