Who Is Performing at the Super Bowl LX? Meet the Stellar Cast Including Bad Bunny, Charlie Puth, Coco Jones, & More

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Who Is Performing at the Super Bowl LX? Meet the Stellar Cast Including Bad Bunny, Charlie Puth, Coco Jones, & More

Bad Bunny headlines the Super Bowl LX Halftime Show on Feb. 8 at Levi’s Stadium, with Green Day, Charlie Puth, Brandi Carlile, and Coco Jones set for pregame and opening ceremony performances. (Images via Getty)

Super Bowl LX is not just New England Patriots vs. Seattle Seahawks at Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8. It is a full-day music production built around Bad Bunny, Green Day, Charlie Puth, Brandi Carlile,

Coco Jones

, and a long list of guests onstage and on the sidelines.NBC, People, CBS News, and Radio Times have all laid out the schedule. Bad Bunny has set the tone himself, telling reporters "It's going to be a huge party" and promising to bring his culture to one of the biggest stages in the world. This is what that “party” actually looks like hour by hour.

Who's performing the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show?

The headline act for the Super Bowl LX halftime show is Puerto Rican superstar Bad Bunny, following in the recent footsteps of Kendrick Lamar, Usher, and Rihanna.

He was announced as this year’s headliner back in September 2025, per multiple reports, after years of being one of the most streamed artists on the planet.Radio Times noted that Bad Bunny has been Spotify’s most-streamed artist in four of the last six years, interrupted only by Taylor Swift in 2023 and 2024. He has been here before. He first appeared at the Super Bowl in 2020 as the meme-famous “silver man” guest during Jennifer Lopez and Shakira’s halftime show.

This time, he is the name on the marquee.

Bad Bunny will hit the stage at halftime of Patriots vs. Seahawks on Sunday night, live on NBC and Peacock in the United States and NFL Game Pass via DAZN and other partners in international markets, according to the outlets that have broken down the broadcast plans. The set is expected to lean into his mix of Latin pop, hip-hop, and reggaeton, with industry rumors circling possible guests like Cardi B and other Latin stars, though nothing has been confirmed.At his Apple Music press conference, covered by CBS News and others, Bad Bunny made it clear this show is bigger than just a viral moment. "To be honest, I don't know how I'm feeling. There's a lot. I'm still in the middle of my tour. I was just at the Grammys last week. All of that," he said. He added that the real excitement is for the people around him, saying "I'm excited, but at the same time, I feel more excited about the people than even me, my family, my friends, the people who have always believed in me.

"This year’s halftime show also carries a milestone that affects how people will experience Bad Bunny’s set. Reports on the pregame and halftime plans explain that Super Bowl LX will feature a multilingual signing program that includes Puerto Rican Sign Language for the first time.Interpreter Celimar Rivera Cosme, who worked on Bad Bunny’s massive Puerto Rico residency that drew more than half a million fans, will lead the halftime signing team.

The signed performances are being staged in collaboration with Alexis Kashar of LOVE SIGN and Howard Rosenblum of Deaf Equality, according to coverage of the league’s announcement.

Who's singing the National Anthem at Super Bowl 2026?

The pregame stage belongs to Charlie Puth. Multiple interviews, including a January 2026 conversation with Rolling Stone cited in the coverage, confirmed that the "Changes" singer will handle the national anthem at Levi’s Stadium.Puth did not stumble into the role. He told Rolling Stone that he actively went after it. "I actually have always wanted to do this, and I recorded a little demo, just me singing with the Rhodes and sent it to Roc Nation," he said. "I’ve been told Jay-Z loved it, and it got to [NFL Commissioner Roger] Goodell and they all said that I could do it."He also framed the anthem as a vocal test. He called Whitney Houston’s version "the best one ever done" and praised Chris Stapleton’s performance as raw enough to "make grown men cry."

His aim on Sunday, as he put it, is to prove he can handle what he called "the hardest piece of music ever written" in his own way.The anthem is not the only pregame song designed to say something bigger about the country and the league. Brandi Carlile will sing "America the Beautiful" and Coco

Jones

will perform "Lift Every Voice and Sing," often referred to as the Black national anthem. That order has been reported across outlets including People and CBS News.Carlile told The SoCal Sound, in comments later picked up by Parade, that she sees "America the Beautiful" as the song she can stand behind fully. She called the opportunity "profound" and said, "That is a song that I can fully put every piece of my weight behind, every piece of my heart and soul I can put inside the lyric of 'America the Beautiful' and mean it. And if I couldn’t, I wouldn’t. I wouldn’t have sung it."Jones spoke to Apple Music about being trusted with "Lift Every Voice and Sing."

She admitted, "I don't know how to feel. I'm still shocked," and added that she sees it as a cultural assignment as much as a career look. "It's just surreal, my life sometimes, but I do think it's an honor that they looked at me and they said, 'Yup, she can represent culture in this worldwide moment.'"These performances will also be signed. Deaf performer Fred Beam will sign both the national anthem and "Lift Every Voice and Sing" in American Sign Language.

Julian Ortiz will sign "America the Beautiful." Those details have been laid out in breakdowns of the pregame show plans and signal how intentional the league is about treating these songs as part of the broadcast, not filler.

Who are the artists performing at Super Bowl 2026 and when are they on?

Super Bowl Sunday is basically a mini music festival wrapped around a championship game. Across NBC, Peacock, and league platforms, fans will see a full lineup that moves from parking lot to opening ceremony to halftime.Reports from NBC and People outline three main stages for music on game day: the tailgate concert, the opening ceremony, and the halftime show. Together, they stack established names with rising artists and hometown connections.The plan, in Eastern time, looks like this:

  • 3:50 p.m.- Teddy Swims performs at the official Super Bowl Tailgate, live on Peacock. Rising rapper LaRussell is also on that bill as the early opener.
  • 6:00 p.m. - The Super Bowl LX opening ceremony airs on NBC and Peacock, with Green Day, Charlie Puth, Brandi Carlile, and Coco Jones handling the main performances.
  • 6:30 p.m. - Kickoff for Patriots vs. Seahawks on NBC and Peacock.
  • Halftime - Bad Bunny’s Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show, with his set and the halftime signing team taking over Levi’s Stadium.

LaRussell and Teddy Swims give the tailgate show a newer-artist edge. They are not the names trending on halftime posters, but they are the ones playing to fans hours before the national anthem even starts, and Peacock will carry that live.

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