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Photograph: Time Out
Photograph: Time Out

London events in July 2026

Your definitive guide to the best events and things to do happening in London throughout July 2026

Rosie Hewitson
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July is the month where London really lets its collective hair down and has some fun. It’s just too hot to stay cooped up indoors so everyone descends on lidos en masse, or assembles in fun-seeking hordes at rooftop barsbeer gardens and alfresco restaurants. We can already taste the sweet, sweet golden hour spritzes.

And as ever, this year's July line-up of massive festivals and other prospects that are exciting enough tempt you away from yet another tinny in the park. Some massive music names are descending on central London for BST Hyde Park, ravers will be heading west for Junction 2, electronic music artists from around the world are playing Labyrinth by the Thames. Or, if you like your outdoor entertainment to be deeply weird and feline-inspired, spring for the long-awaited revival of Cats at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre. 

Other London music festivals are popping off throughout the month, and it’s also a chance to take in the city’s lavender and sunflower fields, which are going to be at their blooming loveliest. Here’s our guide to the best exhibitions, shows and things to do this July 2026 in London. 

RECOMMENDED: The definitive London events calendar

The best July 2026 events in London

  • Things to do

As soon as June hits, London is packed with parades, parties and protests for Pride Month to mark the anniversary of the 1969 Stonewall riots. The London Pride parade is traditionally the focus of festivities, but there are plenty of other LGBTQ+ events taking place both before and after it. Over a million people take to the streets of London for the celebration each summer, with this year’s event scheduled for Saturday July 4.

Recommended: Everything you need to know about the London Pride parade 2025.

  • Music
  • Music festivals
  • Hyde Park
  • Recommended

BST will be back again next summer, bringing some of the world’s biggest pop stars to Hyde Park for its 13th edition. Already announced as headliners for 2026 are Maroon 5, Lewis Capaldi, Pitbull, Kesha and Garth Brooks, with more to be confirmed. Taking place across weekends in June and July, Hyde Park will host an upmarket festival vibe complete with food, drink and a posh VIP area.

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  • Musicals
  • Regent’s Park

For years, Andrew Lloyd Webber’s blockbuster adaptation of TS Eliot’s cat poems has been a byword for ’80s musical theatre kitsch, famous for feline perfomers in glam make-up and legwarmers. And the truly terrible movie adaptation didn't help. But now, it's getting a brand new staging as the Open Air Theatre's 2026 summer musical. It’ll be directed and choreographed by OAT boss Drew McOnie, who'll be tasked with making this banger-filled but resolutely weird show sing 
(or caterwaul) for modern-day audiences.

  • Things to do
  • Sport events

After four years of waiting, the World Cup is back, and following the group stages in June, this month will feature an ever more high-stakes carnival of heroic performances, career-defining cock-ups, and TV camera cutaways to fans on the edge of euphoria (or despair), as the knock-out stages get underway in Canada, Mexico and the United States. 

The bookies have the Three Lions among the top five favourites, so here’s hoping we’ll still be cheering our lovely lads right til the end of the tournament. But whatever happens, practically every pub and bar in London will be getting in on the action and vying for your attendance during the World Cup’s biggest games (some of which will be kicking off as early as 5am BST). Click through for our pick of the best screenings around the city. Come on England!

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  • Art
  • Contemporary art
  • Bankside

As a rising star of the avant garde art scene in ’80s New York, there’s no knowing what brilliant work Cuban-American artist Ana Mendieta might still be producing if her career hadn’t been cut tragically short, but it’s doubly unfortunate that the work she did produce is often obscured by conversations about the murder trial that ensued after she allegedly fell to her death from Manhattan apartment she shared with her husband, modernist sculptor Carl Andre, aged just 36.

Great news, then, that the Tate Modern is putting the art front and centre this summer, in the largest UK exhibition of Ana Mendieta’s work to date, featuring many pieces never exhibited in this country before. Delving into the Havana-born, Iowa-raised artist’s groundbreaking practice spanning performance, photography and video art, it will explore Mendieta’s deep affinity with the natural world, while making the case that she deserves to be remembered as one of the most important artists of the 20th century. 

Latino Life in the Park returns to Walpole Park for its tenth anniversary, bringing live music, food and performances from across Latin America to west London. Expect four stages of salsa, bachata, reggaeton and samba, more than 20 food traders and a spectacular 500-person dance parade in vibrant ceremonial dress. Taking place on July 19, it's one of the capital's most colourful summer festivals.

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  • Music
  • Pop
  • Aldwych
  • Recommended

Somerset House Summer Series is back for another year. Held in the Edmond J. Safra Fountain court, in the enclave of the iconic Neoclassical building, this ten-day open-air gig series has long held space for an ecclectic range of acts including both exciting up-and-comers and well-known trailblazers from the UK and beyond. Breakthrough pop sensation Naïka, veteran indie band The Cribs, ascendent art-rock outfit Black Country, New Road and psychedelic rockers The Flaming Lips are some of the big names on this year’s line-up. Also headlining are Palace, Thee Sacred Souls, Lightning Seeds, Agnes Obel , Venna, Raf-Saperra and Benjamin Clementine.

  • Things to do

In the sweltering city heat, few things are more inviting than the prospect of plunging into one of London's finest al fresco swimming pools. And everyone knows it. The capital has well and truly caught the open-air bathing bug over the last few years, but that also means that on the hottest days of the year, you’ll need to book well in advance if you want to secure a poolside spot. The good news is that there’s a bounty of places for getting your outdoor swim fix in the city. Heated or unheated, regimented lanes or wide open water, serious fitness or chilled family fun – these are all of London’s best lidos and outdoor swimming pools for whatever floats your boat.

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  • Things to do
  • Sport events
  • Barbican

After the British Grand Prix on July 5, the Silverstone tarmac will have barely cooled before more F1 excitement rolls into London later in July. In a first for his career, 15-time race winner and certified British sporting legend Jenson Button is taking to the stage at the Barbican for a look back at life in the fast lane. An Evening with Jenson Button promises to track everything from his maiden 2006 F1 win to a whole trove of previously untold, behind-the-wheel stories. In conversation with broadcaster Ant Anstead, Button will also open up the floor to the Barbican Hall crowd. So if you have a burning question about his glory days, or want his take on the current 2026 grid, this is your chance to ask it.

  • Music
  • Dance and electronic
  • Brentford

Once again, London’s most ravey festival will take over Boston Manor Park with some of the biggest names in techno and house. Celebrating its 10th birthday this year, Junction 2 will span a mega two weekends with an absolutley stacked line-up featuring the godmothers and godfathers of electronic music alongside exciting contemporary talent. DJs announced for 2026 include Nina Kraviz, Adam Beyer, Franky Wah, Jeff Mills, Francesco del Garda, Gabrielle Kwarteng b2b Peach, I Hate Models, Miss Monique, Nicolas Lutz.  

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  • Children's
  • South Bank

Shakespeare's Globe loves a good family summer show, and this year, the team behind previous outings Rough Magic and Midsummer Mechanicals has written a completely new story that's not based on one of the bard's works. Rather, it follows Cass, a young boy whose childhood has been filled with adventures inspired by his grandmother’s love of Shakespeare. But he’s losing interest – can he find it again? Directed by Lucy Cuthertson, it’s aimed at ages five plus.

  • Things to do

The beginning of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in the early days of the season is one of the key signs that summer has kicked into gear in London, and few things say ‘summer in the city’ like kicking back at an outdoor screening and watching all the thrilling live action from the oldest tennis tournament in the world.

This year the tournament is happening from Monday June 29 - Sunday July 12 2026. Thousands will be descending on SW19 to see the matches go down in real life but live screenings will be peppered all over London for thousands more who missed the ticket ballot or can’t be bothered to queue in the hopes of getting in day of. Most watch parties won’t cost you a single penny, and with a jug of Pimms in one hand and a punnet of strawberries in the other, you’ll hardly know the difference. Click through for our guide to the best screenings around the city.

RECOMMENDED: Our full guide to Wimbledon 2026.

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  • Music
  • Music festivals
  • Greenwich

The Old Royal Naval College is normally a tranquil, historic spot bordered by the peaceful Thames. But it's getting a little bit noisier this July, thanks to promoter Labryinth – which will bring electronic artists from across the world to take over the historic digs for six days of unmissable performances. Headliners for 2026 include The Kooks, Dom Dolla, Peggy Gou, Prospa, Kelly Lee Owens, MPH; Overmono, Erika de Casier and Nick Leon b2b Verraco, Adriatique, Anjunadeep, Moby and Michael Bibi. 

  • Things to do
  • Walks and tours

Nothing sums up the best of London’s balmy, thriving summers quite like the noble sunflower. The clue’s in the name, after all: during the part of the year where we’re blessed with the most of those sweet, sweet rays, that’s when we see the most of these golden, spindly, great-vibe giants. There are plenty of dazzling pick-your-own sunflower fields within very easy reach of London. Before you head off on a sunny adventure, make sure to check in with these sites in advance to be sure of fresh crops and full blooms – Mother Nature is an unruly and unpredictable force.

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  • Things to do
  • Film events
  • South Bank

In the middle of Disability Pride Month, BFI Southbank is putting on a programme that will showcase the best of disabled filmmaking, creativity and community. The weekend will feature the world premiere of documentary D-PUNK from the D-Punk Collective, the UK premier of Sundance selected film Joybubbles and the European festival premiere of comedy Lone Wolves by Ryan Cunningham which stars autistic writer-performer Matt Foss. On the final day of the fest, there’ll be a curation of short films platforming disabled-led animation, comedies and documentaries focused on resisting ableism. 

  • Musicals
  • Leicester Square

For a novel about Edinburgh heroin addicts written in dense Scottish dialogue, Irvine Welsh’s Trainspotting has proved to be a remarkably enduring cultural artefact: a book (with numerous sequels), a film, a cult stage play and now – 33 years on – a musical written by Welsh himself. The truth, of course, is that Danny Boyle’s film is its most iconic and definitive form, which this musical pretty much acknowleges: its song list will mix tracks by Welsh plus collaborator Stephen McGuinness with bangers from the movie’s iconic Britpop-era soundtrack.

It’s hard to exactly imagine a musical about heroin addicted criminals in ’90s Edinburgh ending up as a Les Mis-style long-runner, but the show is directed by Caroline Jay Ranger, who has made a very solid fist of directing the live versions of Fawlty Towers and Only Fools and HorsesTrainspotting is significantly edgier source material, but the film was a big hit and they’re clearly leaning into nostalgia for it. Don’t expect any star names, but the lead role of semi-likeable casualty Renton (aka the Ewan McGregor role) goes to Scots actor Robbie Scott (pictured).

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  • Music
  • Music festivals
  • Tooting

Once, country music seemed naffer than a pair of bedazzled jorts. Now you can’t move for east London types sporting cowboy boots and announcing their love for queen Dolly Parton, while CMAT, Beyoncé’foray into country sounds has brought whole new audiences to the genre. See what all the hype's about at the second edition of (rootin’) Tooting festival Country on the Common, which is back to bring another dose of Wild West energy to SW17. 

The line-up for 2026 features acts including Seasick Steve, Cody Pennington, Kezia Gill, Vernon Kay and Elles Bailey. Other country-style entertainments are also on offer, like Shania Twain and Johnny Cash tribute acts, fun extras like axe throwing, plus sticky ribs and beer stalls to fuel your day. There are kid-friendly events like Old West Circus and Tall Tails Storytelling. And of course, a rodeo bull ride to test your commitment to the country lifestyle. Yeehaw!

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  • Sport and fitness
  • Leisure centres
  • Canary Wharf

 Open water swimming has been a spring and summer fixture at Canary Wharf’s Eden Dock for the past couple of years already, but now it’s becoming permanent, just in time for the summer. First announced in September, and due to open in late June, Sea Lanes has been built by the team behind the very successful Sea Lanes Brighton, the UK’s first National Open Water Swimming Centre.

The open air fresh water lido, which is 50 metres in length and 1.3 metres deep, features six lanes swimming lanes designed to cater to all ages and capabilities, from family dips to serious cold-water plunges. Who’s ready for an alfresco dip among the skyscrapers?

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  • Art
  • Sculpture
  • Hyde Park

Another London summer beckons: clouds clearing, days lengthening, an imaginative structure being erected in Kensington Gardens. Mexican architecture firm LANZA atelier has been chosen to design this 2026 Serpentine Pavilion, which features a ‘crinkle-crankle’ wall. Traditional structures seen in English architecture from the 18th century, these wavy partitions temper climate, create shelter, and are ideal for growing fruit. And fittingly, they’re also known as serpentine walls. 

The prestigious architectural commission celebrates its 25th anniversary in 2026, with a landmark series of talks programmed in collaboration with the Zaha Hadid Foundation, the charitable organisation founded by the late Iraqi-British architect, who designed the inaugural Pavilion 25 years ago. The programme kicks off with an Architects’ Talk hosted by Hans Ulrich Obrist, with a series of Family Days featuring hands-on workshops, creative activities and performances for all ages scheduled throughout the summer. Check out the Serpentine’s website for further details in due course. 

  • Film

Outdoor cinema season is up and running in the capital. There’s a summer of moonlit movies ahead in an array of scenic park, rooftop and riverside spots and the projectors will soon start whirring at Rooftop Cinema Club, Adventure Cinema and many others. On the slate for 2026 are the usual mix of crowdpleasers, cult classics and recent blockbuster hits. But expect some exciting new additions from the past 12 months, too, including Sinners, Wicked: For Good, One Battle After Another and Weapons, to Back to the Future, Jurassic Park, La La Land and all the old favourites.

Recommended:

📽️ The 100 greatest cinemas in the world right now
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💰 London’s best cheap cinemas

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  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Soho
Watch the famous Waiters’ Race at Soho Village Fête
Watch the famous Waiters’ Race at Soho Village Fête

A longstanding Soho tradition – going back more than half a century – this annual neighbourhood knees-up is organised by volunteers from the Soho Society, and sees the garden of Soho’s St Anne’s Church bursting with live music and entertainment. 

The main draw of the day is the Soho Waiters’ Race. A tradition dating back to 1955, it starts at 3.15pm outside the French House, and sees a gaggle of waiters pelt through the streets of Soho, each holding a tray stacked with a bottle of champers, a glass and a napkin, all of which must be intact when they cross the finish line Another crowd favourite is the Soho Dog Show, which awards eight different prizes including ‘Dog who looks most like their owner’. 

Alongside this, visitors can expect six hours of entertainment including live music, snail racing, a spaghetti-eating contest, a tug-of-war, a human fruit machine, foodie stalls, and The French House Bar.

Best of all? It’s absolutely free to attend, although the gardens have a maximum capacity of 500, so turn up nice and early or be prepared to queue.

  • Things to do
  • Food and drink events
  • Bermondsey

Feeling thirsty? Desperate for a funky sour, cheeky saison or a fruity IPA? You’re in luck. The Capital’s biggest beer celebration is back for 2026, taking place at Southwark Park, for four-hour sessions of non-stop-beer-drinking bliss. Set over two days, you’ll get to sample London’s best beers as well as some international standouts, including our faves Gipsy Hill, Verdant, Deya and more. Hungry? The food line up is pretty serious too, this year featuring Meltdown Cheeseburgers, Bone Daddies and Chick N’ Sours. A ticket gets you a four-hour session and access to more than 800 beers from over 100 brewers, and there are group discounts available too. All the beer is included in the ticket price. Happy drinking, folks. 

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  • Art
  • Dulwich

Dulwich Picture Gallery's big summer exhibition will be an intriguing contrast with the pastoral landscapes found in its permanent collection. Portrait of a City is all about American urban life, as documented by photographers between 1907 and 2012. It'll offer a fascinating insight into how big cities including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco grew from low-rise communities into towering assemblages of skyscrapers and multi-lane traffic. Photos from big names including Diane Arbus, Lewis Hine and Dorothea Lange will chart the faces and sights of cities in flux.

  • Things to do
  • Performances
  • Hyde Park

As well as putting on mega stars – with this year’s lineup including Lewis Capaldi, Pitbull, Maroon 5 and Duran Duran – every year BST Hyde Park also hosts Open House, an eight-day-long event that’s mostly free to attend. This year’s Open House lineup is focusing on fitness – but in a fun way. Grab a chance to run with Olympic superstar Sir Mo Farah, in a 3km distance run around the park, followed by a question and answer session with the long-distance runner (June 30). There’ll also be a chance to join an X-Fight workout session, inspired by martial arts, hosted by Davina McCall, followed by panel talks on wellness and self-confidence. Watch this space for more events as they’re announced. 

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  • Musicals
  • Barbican

This is a fun one: Death Note the Musical is an adaptation of the hit manga that tells the story of one Light Yagami, a brilliant student who is given a notebook by a capricious magical being. The book has one very specific function: anyone whose name is written in it will die within 40 seconds. It’s not your everyday story, that's for sure, but that goes for a lot of musicals, and you can actually kind of see it working. It's had various Asian productions over the last decade, but this new one from director Stephen Whitson is easily its biggest Western outing to date.

  • Things to do

It may be known for its sleepy scent and soothing properties, but there’s nothing dozy about the explosion of colour that happens around London’s lavender fields each summer. There are several farms dedicated to the mauve blooms just outside the capital, in Kent, Surrey and Hertfordshire. Immerse yourself in a purple haze this summer by visiting one of London’s fragrant lavender gardens, or head out of town on a day trip to find sweeping fields of the stuff.

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  • Music
  • East Ham

The UK's annual festival line-up is full to bursting, so any new entrant onto the field will need to stand out to survive. And luckily, Hush Festival does just that. Festival founders Peter and Shabira Cassidy are determined to bring a quieter kind of fest to their East Ham community, and they've teamed up with Cocteau Twins ex-member Simone Raymonde to curate a resolutely chilled line-up, performed to a seated audience.

Headliners include Cate Le Bon, This Is The Kit, and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah doing a piano and voice set. The festival ethos is all about being present and listen deeply, so as well as being encouraged to sit comfortably and listen, audiences will also be offered talks on mindfulness and sound meditations. So it's certainly not a festival for lovers of mud, moshpits and general chaos, but anyone looking for a sedate dose of musical transcendence is sure to find it here. 

  • Theatre & Performance

It was announced earlier this year that rather than just cease all activities during its current period of closure and refurbishment, the tiny, historic Arts Theatre in the West End was going to try something a little different: it was going to build a temporary theatre that at 594 seats would be almost 250 seats bigger than the parent one. It would be next to Marble Arch, in roughly the spot where beloved London folly the Mound once stood.

The Arts at Marble Arch will open in July with a return to London for Heathers (Jul 9-Aug 22), the much loved cult musical adapted from the Winona Ryder/Christian Slater black comedy that has played several seasons in London, mostly at The Other Palace. It’ll christen TAAMA with a limited, 52-performance only run that will predate a UK tour. 

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From swanky skyscrapers to casual warehouse hangouts and hidden pub terraces, London has a real crush on a rooftop bar. Sometimes were even blessed with perfect weather when were up there. To enjoy natural high, there are all kinds of rooftops which offer a winning combination of incredible city views and perfect drinks, be they on top of carparks, or hotels.

So take your pick from spots in stylish Shoreditch, buzzing Soho and Covent Garden, hipster haven Peckham and more – it’s time to soak up those sunsets. Some are only open in the summer, but quite a few are year-rounders, where you can sit under heaters, or, if youre hardcore, in the brisk London breeze. If youd rather something a little more grounded, then have a look at Londons best beer gardens

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • West Kensington

Dig out your best cosplay for this annual festival, which brings a touch of Tokyo to west London. Hyper Japan is the UK’s largest celebration of Japanese culture, taking place at Hammersmith's Olympia Events space each summer. This year’s headline draws are performances from anime soundtrack regulars Queen Bee and tiktok dance stars avantgardey. 

Across three days, there’ll also be Japanese arts and crafts workshops, martial arts classes, performances from acclaimed Japanese musicians, a market with artworks and heritage crafts, lots of Japanese garb for sale and, of course, an irresistible array of Japanese food to sink your teeth into. 

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