Guelph Summer Festivals 2026
the ones worth planning your weekend around

Guelph punches above its weight when it comes to festivals. For a city this size, the summer calendar is dense, and most of the big ones are either free or close to it. Here are the ones I would build a weekend around in 2026.
Start with the Guelph and District Multicultural Festival, June 12 to 14 at Riverside Park. It turns 40 this year, which tells you something about how rooted it is in the community. Free admission, cultural music and dance across the weekend, midway rides, a family tent, and food from a long list of traditions. It draws over 20,000 people and it still manages to feel like a neighbourhood gathering rather than a tourist event. Go hungry.
Right around the same window, the Guelph Dance Festival runs in early June with performances downtown and free programming in the south end. It is smaller and easy to miss, but it is one of those events that makes the city feel alive in a quieter way.
Then there is Hillside. The big one. July 17 to 19 at the Guelph Lake Conservation Area, with multiple stages, workshops, a dedicated kids' stage, and a lineup that mixes well known names with artists you have never heard of and leave loving. Hillside has been running since 1984 and it has a reputation across Ontario for good reason. If you only do one festival weekend this summer, this is the one people will ask if you went to.
The season ends with Ribfest, put on by the Rotary Club of Guelph Trillium at Riverside Park the weekend of August 28. It is free to attend with a donation at the gate, and over the years the event has raised more than a million dollars for the community. Live music all weekend, a midway, and several competing ribbers filling the park with smoke. It is the unofficial last call on summer before September resets everything.
A quick practical note. Parking downtown and near Riverside Park gets tight on festival weekends. The Market Parkade at 10 Wilson Street runs a flat three dollar rate on weekends, and transit routes run close to most of these events. If you are coming in from out of town, build in extra time.
What I always tell people considering Guelph is that this festival calendar is not an accident. A city that shows up for free community events year after year is a city where people actually know their neighbours. That is hard to measure on paper, but you feel it the first summer you live here.
Recent Posts











