Picture this: the California desert, scorching heat, 100,000 people, bass drops echoing across polo fields, and right in the middle of it all, a bindi catching the light. Not as a costume. Not as a “festival accessory.” But as an identity.
Coachella 2026 was not just another music festival. For Indians, it was a moment. And honestly? We showed up.
Lara Raj — The Girl Who Performed With Her Bindi On

Let’s start with the biggest desi moment of the weekend, Lara Raj.
A Tamil Indian girl from Connecticut, Lara is a member of KATSEYE, the global girl group formed under HYBE (the powerhouse behind BTS) and Geffen Records. At just 20 years old, she became the first Indian-origin artist to sign under a HYBE label, and she brought that energy straight to the Coachella stage.
What made it unforgettable wasn’t just the performance. It was that she showed up as herself, bindi on, bangles on, no apologies. For every brown girl who was told to wipe off her bindi before school or hide her culture to fit in, watching Lara own that stage felt personal. Her sister Rhea Raj was also in the crowd cheering her on, making it a full desi moment for the books.
This is what representation actually looks like.
The Fashion Stories That Went Viral
If Lara owned the stage, these three owned the desert.
1. Kritika Khurana (That Boho Girl)
India’s beloved fashion influencer Kritika Khurana brought her signature effortless style to Coachella, and her audience loved every second of it. Known for making fashion feel accessible and fun, Kritika’s looks blended her personal aesthetic with subtle desi touches, proving that you don’t have to choose between being fashionable and being Indian. Millions of her followers got a front-row seat to Coachella through her content, and honestly, that reach is everything.
2. Kimaya Jane
Kimaya Jane arrived at Coachella with style, grace, and a feed full of looks that had people talking. Her presence added to the growing list of Indian women who are no longer watching Coachella from the sidelines, they’re in the thick of it, dressed beautifully and representing loudly.
3. Alanna Panday

Bollywood-connected, social-media-savvy, and always camera-ready, Alanna Panday brought her signature glam to the desert. Her Coachella content gave Indian fans at home a taste of the festival life, and her looks kept the conversation going long after the weekend ended. When Alanna posts, India watches, and at Coachella 2026, there was plenty to watch.
The Creators Who Made It a Cultural Statement
Some people attend Coachella. Others make a point of attending Coachella.
1. Seerat Saini
Seerat Saini, a Punjabi-American creator and former Meta employee, has made a commitment every year for the past three years: she will only wear South Asian designers at Coachella. No exceptions. This year, she wore a showstopping piece that took four pairs of hands, two weeks, and over 200 hours of Indian craftsmanship to create.
Her message is clear and powerful: “Don’t repackage it as boho. Advocate for our people.”
She sees Coachella as a massive distribution channel, festival content goes viral, algorithms push it everywhere, and suddenly millions of people are seeing what real South Asian design looks like. That’s not just fashion. That’s impact.
2. Vidhya Ramachandra
Vidhya Ramachandra brought the same intentional energy, using her platform and her outfits to tell a South Asian story, one look at a time. In a sea of similar festival fashion, she stood out by standing in her culture rather than apart from it.
Why This Matters for India

Here’s the thing, most of us watched this from our phones, from Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, or a small town somewhere in between. And yet it felt like we were there.
Because when Lara performed with her bindi, when Seerat wore 200 hours of Indian craftsmanship, when Kritika and Alanna and Kimaya and Vidhya showed up proud, they were carrying all of us with them.
Indian designers like Tarun Tahiliani and Masaba got global eyeballs. Indian culture got celebrated, not borrowed. And a generation of young desi kids got to see themselves reflected in one of the biggest cultural events on the planet.
Conclusion
Coachella once called bindis “forehead rhinestones.” In 2026, those same bindis were on the main stage, on viral content, on the feeds of millions.
South Asian fashion didn’t need Coachella to become visible, the artistry has always been there. But this year, the world finally looked. And what they saw was us, fully and unapologetically.
Which Indian at Coachella 2026 was your favourite moment? Drop it in the comments!




