Phi Beach has filled in the rest of its summer 2026 calendar, and the finished program runs to 45 nights. The Sardinian venue opens on 17 July and closes on 12 September, with 29 of those nights falling back to back through August.
The club sits inside Forte Cappellini, a 19th century fortress on the cliffs above Baja Sardinia, and has been running since 2008. Its 2026 booking sheet is built on names that headline main rooms elsewhere. Black Coffee takes three separate dates, on 24 July, 2 August and 13 August. Fisher plays on 11 August, Peggy Gou on 16 August, and Seth Troxler shares 15 August with Dennis Cruz.
A season booked around returning names
The rest of the program spreads across house, melodic, Afro, tech and minimal. Jamie JonesThe Martinez Brothers with AMÉMÉ, Honey DijonCrazy Says, AdriatiqueMochakk, PAWSA, Damian Lazarus, Mau P, Vintage Culture, James Hype, Agoria, Claptone, Meduza and Bob Sinclar all appear, with Claptone and Bob Sinclar taking two dates each. Palm Tree Sardinia runs the site on 31 July with Loco Dice and again on 1 August. September is short: Themba on the 5th, Sona on the 12th.
The production has been rebuilt
The bigger news is what the venue has done to the site itself. A new L-Acoustics system covers the whole space, paired with a lighting design from Claypaky and fresh projections that map across the rock faces and fortress walls. Interiors have been refurbished and the restaurant concept redesigned. Phi Beach is calling it the most ambitious season in its history.
Multiple rooms on one cliff
Phi Beach has grown since 2008 by keeping electronic music, dining and hospitality on one site above the sea, with sunset views over the Costa Smeralda. It splits into several spaces: Luciano’s for coastal Sardinian cuisine, Nammos for the Mykonos brand’s Mediterranean menu, and The Rock, a private enclave tucked into the cliffs behind the fortress with its own entrance.
How we see it
Forty five nights is a long season, and the booking sheet is the interesting part. Black Coffee on three dates, Claptone and Bob Sinclar on two each: this is a room hiring artists it expects to work more than eleven, which points to a crowd that returns rather than one passing through. The production spend is worth watching too. Projection mapping onto granite boulders and fortress walls is a harder job than hanging a screen behind the booth, and if it lands, Phi Beach ends up with something the bigger Mediterranean clubs cannot easily copy.