The best music festivals in the UK and Europe

We’ve handpicked the best music festivals in the UK and Europe for 2024. From tiny gatherings in the UK countryside to beachside parties in Barcelona, plus our favourite London names to bookmark, these are the festivals to head to this year

Words by Ollie Horne
Last updated: June 26, 2024
Best European festivals | Lost Village
Lost Village. Photo by Giles Smith

Festival season in the UK and Europe is drawing ever closer, so we’ve broken down the best of the best for 2024, from legendary events that have shaped the history of music to lesser-known celebrations in remote corners of Europe. We’ve drawn up a definitive shortlist of the music festivals with the best line-ups, locations and atmosphere for unforgettable live moments, whether you’re a fan of rock, pop, electronic or jazz, as well as considering sustainability initiatives. So get stuck in, and book tickets for your favourite event while they are still available.

Best European festivals | Primavera Sound
Khruangbin playing Primavera Sound in 2022. Photo by Sergio Albert

Primavera Sound

When: 29 May-2 June
Where: Barcelona, Spain
Price: Weekend pass 295 EUR / 321.39 USD

Nothing says the start of Europe’s festival season like Primavera Sound in Barcelona. For the last 21 years, the festival has transformed the Parc del Fórum into a week-long musical extravaganza, and since 2012, has expanded its offering with a festival in Porto the following weekend. Last year, another in Madrid joined Porto for the first time too. Primavera has been pioneering a 50/50 gender and pronoun split for its line-ups since 2019, and is the only festival in the world to be co-signed by the United Nations for its sustainability efforts: all on-site vehicles are powered by electricity, there’s a stage powered entirely by renewable energy, and single-use plastics are banned from the site. With headliners for 2024 including Lana del Rey, SZA and Pulp, alongside performances from Peggy Gou, The Last Dinner Party and BadBadNotGood, you know it’s going to be a good one. There is no camping at Primavera, so take your pick from Barcelona’s excellent selection of hotels, hostels and Airbnb rentals.

Best European festivals | Meadows in the Mountains
Crowds at Meadows in the Mountains

Meadows in the Mountains

When: 6-10 June
Where: Smolyan, Bulgaria
Price: Weekend pass 220.64 GBP / 281.35 USD

Meadows in the Mountains has what is possibly the most beautiful setting for a festival right now: a private plot of land up in the Rhodope mountains of Bulgaria, with far reaching views over wildflower meadows, mature woodland and rolling hills. The festival is also one of few championing regenerative environmentalism in the industry, having built solar power infrastructure, water treatment schemes, rainwater retention landscapes, compost-to-biogas converters and ‘manure-heated shit-hot showers’, as well as a ‘food forest’ and reforestation plans. The festival itself is kept intentionally small to foster a genuine sense of community – you’ll very likely make new friends and continually bump into them throughout the weekend. The organisers offer a few free tickets each year to guests that make the most effort to arrive at the festival without flying, so start researching train routes, or strap some panniers to your bike and get peddling.

Best European festivals | Sonár
Jamz Supernova playing at last year's Sonár. Photo by Tomàs Moyà

Sónar

When: 13-15 June
Where: Barcelona, Spain
Price: Weekend pass 350 EUR / 381.38 USD

Two weeks into festival season and Barcelona is blessed with another weekend of music, specialising in all things electronic. It’s also a city festival, which means gigs occur across various venues, and there’s no camping included, so make sure to book a hotel, hostel or Airbnb rental nearby. The line up is split into day and night programming, and covers a swathe of artists, from big hitters like Kaytranada, DJ Tennis and Toya Delazy to emerging artists like Gazzi and Dalila. Elsewhere, OFFSónar, the series of parties that runs in parallel to the festival itself, has a lineup as exciting as the main event.

Best European festivals | Glastonbury
The Pyramid stage at Glastonbury. Photo by Andrew Allcock

Glastonbury

When: 26-30 June
Where: Pilton, UK
Price: Weekend pass 335 GBP / 400 USD

This wouldn’t be a guide to the best European festivals without mention of Glastonbury. As one of the longest standing festivals (the first one was held in 1970), it has contributed to the blueprint of what makes a good music festival like few others. The iconic Pyramid stage, the rolling fields of Somerset grass (or mud), an endless array of stages, performances and experiences, and the mad rush for tickets – all of these are intrinsic parts of the experience. Tickets are currently sold out for 2024’s edition, and headliners are yet to be announced, but a small batch of resale tickets are to be released in the first week of April, so keep your eyes peeled.

Best European festivals | Roskilde
HAIM performing at Orange Stage at Roskilde 2022. Photo by Flemming Bo Jensen

Roskilde

When: 29 June-6 July
Where: Roskilde, Denmark
Price: 2400 DKK / 339 USD

Roskilde is one of the largest and best festivals in Europe, and the largest in the Nordic countries, with more than 130,000 festival-goers each year. It’s been held south of Roskilde city since 1971 and continues to draw top line-ups, with music running for a full week. Tems, Foo Fighters, J Hus, Skrillex, Jungle and Heilung are all headliners this year. Book your tickets, pitch your tent, and head down to the Orange Stage.

Best European festivals | MELT
The post-industrial set design at MELT

MELT

When: 11-13 July
Where: Ferropolis, Germany
Price: Weekend pass 199.95 EUR  / 217.88 USD

Another music festival in an unusual location – this time, in a former coal mining site filled with decommissioned machinery near Gräfenhainichen in Germany, a two-hour drive from Berlin. MELT curates performances from more than 150 acts over the course of the weekend, and this year includes Skepta, James Blake, Colombian producer Funk Tribu and Berlin-based DJ HorsegiirL. And if pitching your tent beneath a coal excavator doesn’t appeal, don’t fear – there’s fields, forests, and a lake nearby where the camping takes place.

Best European music festivals | Nubya Garcia performing at North Sea Jazz Festival 2022
Nubya Garcia performing at North Sea Jazz Festival 2022

North Sea Jazz Festival

When: 12-14 July
Where: Rotterdam, Netherlands
Price: Day tickets from 135 EUR / 147.13 USD

Running since 1976, Rotterdam’s North Sea Jazz Festival is the biggest indoor jazz festival in the world. A pantheon of jazz and soul greats have passed through in that time, and continue to do so – Joss Stone hits up the stage this year, as does Corinne Bailey Rae, Sampha and Laufey. The curators have been paying attention to what’s been happening in the London music scene recently, with Raye and Mahalia all booked this year, as well as rising Glaswegian jazz band Corto Alto. But it’s not all jazz on offer – Jamaican-American singer-songwriter and saxophonist Masego is making an appearance, as is US rapper and poet Noname, and funk soul virtuosos Vulfpeck, which should not be missed. Weekend tickets have sold out for this year’s edition, but day tickets are still available for Friday and Sunday.

Best European festivals | Womad
WOMAD

WOMAD

When: 25-28 July
Where: Malmesbury, UK
Price: Four-day pass from 260 GBP / 312 USD

Womad festival is proudly international in its outlook, attracting as many artists as possible from across the world to perform in the rolling countryside of Wiltshire each year. This hasn’t got any easier with recent visa problems preventing international acts from travelling to the UK, so it’s all the more vital that Womad continues to push the importance of an international cultural exchange. Dynamic blues duo Amadou & Mariam, hip hop hero Sampa The Great and multifaceted musician Alison Godfrapp are this year’s headliners, with folk-punk Londoners The Great Malarkey and sax-playing singer-songwriter Laura Misch joining elsewhere. Womad is much more than a line-up though – it’s more a constant series of joyful discoveries as the weekend unfolds. Get your tent pitched and keep your ears and eyes wide open.

Best European festivals | Dekmantel
Dekmantel at Amsterdamser Bos

Dekmantel

When: 26 July-4 August
Where: Amsterdam, Netherlands
Price: Four-day festival pass 235 EUR / 256.52 USD

Dekmantel week is a great time to visit Amsterdam. There’s not just the main camping festival in the lush surroundings of Amsterdamser Bos to the south of the city, there’s also a whole music programme on the Wednesday and Thursday scattered across industrial venues along the Ij river, which reflects Amsterdam’s pumping music scene. 2024 marks a whole decade of Dekmantel shaking up the festival landscape, with a stellar combination of DJs and electronic acts with exciting left field live bands – think DJ Storm, Ben UFO and Joy Orbison holding down the decks, and live performances from Ron Trent, Cakes da Killa and Surgeon. Three day weekend tickets at Amsterdamser Bos are currently sold out, but there’s still tickets available for the full four day festival, so snap them up before they go too.

Best European festivals | Sziget festival
Sziget Festival. Photo by Major Kata

Sziget

When: 7-12 August
Where: Budapest, Hungary
Price: Six-day pass 229 EUR / 250.12 USD; weekend pass 199 EUR / 217.35 USD

Sziget, which means ‘island’ in Hungarian, is just that: an island in the middle of the Danube, on the outskirts of Budapest. Each year around half a million people populate it for a week of music and dancing, with some of the biggest names in pop, electronic and rock topping the lineups. 2024 is no exception, with Stormzy, Fred Again, Sam Smith, Honey Dijon, Big Thief, Louis Tomlinson and Becky Hill announced so far. But if you prefer to keep away from the mainstream, the festival is so massive you’re sure to find something to your tastes, with alternative stages, tents and hidden venues catering for everything from reggae to techno. Sziget was an early adopter of electronic passes so there’s no need to carry around a wallet, and the island is almost entirely forested so there’s plenty of shade to camp under – and even a riverside beach for cooling swims.

Best European music festivals | Houghton 2022
Houghton 2022

Houghton

When: 8-11 August
Where: Norfolk, UK
Price: Weekend pass from 297.50 GBP / 380.32 USD

Houghton is for the woodland ravers, set incongruously in the grounds of the neoclassical 18th century manor house Houghton Hall in Norfolk. Normally visited by art fans for its sculpture garden, the estate takes on an altogether different atmosphere on this particular weekend in August, when techno and house heads party in the woods non-stop for the whole three days (seriously, there’s a 24-hour music licence here). It’s one of the UK’s newest festivals, and each year the lineup is like an A to Z of the best electronic artists active right now, so have a read if you must, or just turn up and get dancing.

Best European festivals | We Out Here
We Out Here. Photo by Rob Jones

We Out Here

When: 15-18 August
Where: Dorset, UK
Price: Weekend pass at 240 GBP / 306.89 USD

If you’re a fan of the current wave of young jazz artists coming out of the UK, then you probably already know about We Out Here. Curated by Radio 6 DJ, record label owner and all-round tastemaker Gilles Peterson, the festival packs in all the best jazz and jazz-adjacent acts coming up in London and the rest of the UK, with the odd international act thrown in too (2021 had a surprise set from Thundercat on the Friday night). Last year, the festival moved location from Cambridgeshire to Wimborne St Giles in Dorset, where ravers can now enjoy a breather by the lakeside, or take some time out in the hot tubs in the wellness area. And that’s just the daytime: when night falls, things kick up a notch in the woods with a serious lineup of DJs keeping things ticking into the morning. For 2024, André 3000 is headlining, following the surprise release of his new age flute album, and will include performances from Kae Tempest, Floating Points, and Obongjayar.

Best European festivals | Rock en Seine
Rock en Seine

Rock en Seine

When: 22-25 August
Where: Paris, France
Price: Weekend pass 219 EUR / 239.34  USD

Have you ever been to a festival in a classified historic monument? Rock en Seine is held at Domaine National de Saint-Cloud to the west of Paris, inside a 460-hectare garden designed by André Le Nôtre. The day festival hosts some of the biggest names in rock and pop each year, and 2024 sees Lana Del Rey, Fred Again, Loye Carner, Olivia Dean, Jungle, Kasabian and many more take to the stage. You can buy single day tickets if your favourite bands are concentrated on one day, or get the full weekend pass and stay nearby in Paris. Forgo roughing it in a tent and book a nearby hotel or Airbnb rental.

Best European festivals | Lost Village
Lost Village. Photo by Joshua Atkins

Lost Village

When: 22-25 August
Where: Lincolnshire, UK
Price: Weekend pass 320 GBP / 409.17 USD

Held in a private woodland near Lincoln, only a few thousand revellers come to the boutique UK festival Lost Village each year, bringing an intimate, community atmosphere to the weekend. There’s a huge emphasis on the experience here, with outlandish stage designs, roaming actors, and secret areas obscured in the woods all contributing to the mystique. There’s also genuinely good food and drink, with brands like Patrón and Żubrówka hosting their own bars and serving proper cocktails, and a lineup from some of the UK’s and London’s best restaurants and chefs. On top of all this, Lost Village still manages to book some of the best artists in the electronic world, with Royel Otis, Glass Beams and Floating Points all performing this year.

Best European festivals | Dimensions
At the beachside at Dimensions

Dimensions

When: 29 Aug-2 September
Where: Tisno, Croatia
Price: 190 GBP / 242.99 USD

The 2024 edition of Dimensions returns to Tisno Garden Resort on the Dalmatian coast, and it’s set to cement its position as one of the best festivals in Europe. There’s the usual lineup of festival classics, B2B exclusives, label parties, and debut sets, from DJs spanning house, techno, electro, breaks, minimal, D&B, and disco. If you’re looking for the gritty sounds of Chicago, Detroit, London and Berlin, but would rather experience them under the sun beside the azure waters of the Adriatic, then Dimensions is exactly where you need to be.