The final day of Lollapalooza 2025 saw the hottest temperatures of the festival as well as some of the hottest artists. While many use Sunday as a rest day, thousands chose to spend their day at Grant Park, experiencing some of the best that the music industry has to offer.
The festival was capped by headliners A$AP Rocky and Sabrina Carpenter performing at Bud Light and T-Mobile stages, respectively. Other artists that drew in festivalgoers were Katseye, Isaiah Rashad, Remi Wolf, Dominic Fike, The Marías and Martin Garrix.
Nimino took to Perry’s stage at 1:45 p.m. to give festivalgoers a taste of his unique blend of house and garage music. His small but mighty crowd stuck with him during the performance, dancing and grooving to his original beats.
Isaiah Rashad performed a somewhat disappointing set at T-Mobile stage late Sunday afternoon. Despite the rapper’s endless talent, his melodic songs and lackluster demeanor struggled to captivate the crowd and make a memorable performance.
FINNEAS gave indie music a new life at Lollapalooza on Lake shore stage. In addition to his stunning vocals, the artist brought out a surprise guest to further entrance his crowd.
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Dominic Fike returned to Lollapalooza after pulling out of last year’s lineup but delivered a very choppy and somewhat confusing performance. Not even the assistance of his supposed son was enough to save his set.
The Marías brought dream-pop to Bud Light in an intimate set that allowed the audience to yearn alongside lead singer María Zardoya. Zardoya’s honey-like voice, combined with hypnotic instrumentation, created a performance that captivated the audience.
A$AP Rocky ended Lollapalooza Sunday night with a set that proved him to be not only a rapper but a performer. With a powerful stage presence and impressive visuals, Rocky played some of his biggest songs and rapped each bar with ferocity.
Sabrina Carpenter pulled out all the stops as she closed out the final day of the festival. Her performance was full of dancing, lights, moving set pieces and more to ensure festivalgoers were never bored — not that her discography would let them in the first place.
