Fresno is in the midst of its unofficial festival season.
Set off earlier this month with the Rogue Festival, the “season” runs through April with Tower Porchfest and into May, with the Nelly-headlining Tequila Fest (and the Stoneshiver Jamboree for a more local music push).
And anchoring it all is FresYes Fest.
Downtown’s signature street-party blowout has been happening for the past dozen years at the south end of Fulton Street near Chukchansi Park. Helmed by Fresno Street Eats and Tioga-Sequoia Brewery, the free event is an ode to the city itself and a showcase of the culture that’s grown in and around the Brewery District.
FresYes happens 1-11 p.m. Saturday, March 21.
Here are a few things to know before you go.
Strange Vine plays FresYes Fest for the third time. The duo played the first festival in 2014. KEVIN FIGUEROA Special to The Bee This year’s musical entertainment
While FresYes isn’t technically a music festival, it has historically curated a lineup of music that reflects the city’s soundscape. Think multi-genre, multicultural and multi-generational. The music is set up on two stages, the 99 Stage and the 41 Stage, named for their respective proximity to the freeways that run adjacent to downtown.
Headlining the night is Strange Vine. It’s a suitable choice. The blues-rock duo was on the original FresYes lineup back in 2014 (they returned in 2017) and is less than a month out from dropping an anticipated record (the release show is April 11 at Fulton 55). Hip-hop cover band The Box will once again finish out the night, in what has become a FresYes tradition.
The full FresYes lineup for 2026 includes:
The 99 StageStrange VineLow SpellPrimer VicioJohn PembertonH3avy is the H3adWerebearThe 41 StageThe BoxGodzilla RadioShantel BandBasuraAltezz ArmadaFood and drink (tickets, etc.)
FresYes isn’t technically a food festival either, but it has been instrumental in the growth of the Fresno food truck scene.
To give you a sense of scale: There were just three trucks at the original event, including the iconic Dusty Buns (IYKYK), Benaddiction and La Apacuequena. This year, there are 50-plus food vendors, presenting a full range of eating options, from tacos (obviously) and tamales, to cultural cuisine (Hawaiian, Nigerian, American fair food) and desserts (cookies, ice cream, churros).
Nor is it a beer festival, although Tioga-Sequoia has always been its driving force and the brewery has historically used the event to debut a series of tribute beers (a strawberry blonde ale for Ashley Swearengin when she was mayor or Blood Orange IPA in honor of the proudly pro-Fresno Haron Jaguar). This year the brewery is rebranding and re-releasing its Grizzly City Ale to celebrate the Fresno Grizzlies’ 25th year in downtown. It is also debuting a blueberry honey hard seltzer, created in collaboration with Ampersand Ice Cream.
Drinks are $10 across the board and sold via pre-purchased tickets and available at stands near the festival entrances. Discount tickets are available for $7 through Friday at Tioga-Sequoia’s beer garden.
How to get around (parking and such)
This being a downtown event, you will need to find and pay for parking if you are driving in from another part of town. There is an abundance of street parking in the blocks surrounding the event (farther up on Fulton in the Cultural Arts District, for example) and several parking structures within a close walk to the festival. See: the spiral garage on Inyo and Van Ness; garages at Tulare and Fulton streets, Tulare and Van Ness, and a lot across from Chukchansi Park on H Street.
As reported by the Munro Review, there have been some parking issues following the city’s takeover of downtown lots and garages last month, so you’ll want to do some prep work and download the ParkMobile App.
Those not driving will find ride-share dropoff locations on Inyo (at H Street and Van Ness Avenue) and at Fulton and Tulare streets. The FresnoHop Trolley will also be running, starting at 5 p.m., with pickup stops in the Tower District, Cultural Arts District and Campus Point for those out near Fresno State. The trolley runs until 12:30 a.m., for those staying until last call.
FresYes Fest will once again take over a section of downtown Fresno on Saturday, March 21, 2026. NATALIA SOUZA Tioga-Sequoia
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Joshua Tehee covers breaking news for The Fresno Bee, writing on a wide range of topics from police, politics and weather, to arts and entertainment in the Central Valley.