Cyprus Festivals to Catch This Summer

Header Image

From music and theatre to open-air cinema, food and beer, July and August bring a busy festival calendar across Cyprus.

 

Summer in Cyprus is not only about beaches and crowded coastal roads. Across July and August, the island’s festival calendar moves through city venues, ancient theatres, seaside landmarks, village settings and open-air spaces, offering plenty of reasons to plan an outing.

This guide brings together 10 festivals worth keeping on your radar this summer. Some are major music events with full weekend programmes, while others offer a quieter cultural evening, a family-friendly outing, a food-focused day out or a more alternative performance setting. Together, they show how varied the island’s summer calendar can be, whether you are staying in the city, heading to the coast or looking for something different in the countryside.

LMF 2026: Loud Music Festival

When: July 2 to 5

Where: The Warehouse by IT Quarter, Limassol

Tickets/info: TicketBox

LMF 2026 opens the July festival calendar in Limassol with four consecutive days of music at The Warehouse by IT Quarter. The Loud Music Festival returns with a multi-stage format, bringing DJs and live acts across different sounds and audiences.

The programme is built around variety rather than one single genre. Listings for this year’s edition refer to two stages and a mix of music styles, with nights covering disco, Afrobeats, techno, EDM, RnB, old-school sounds and Greek music. That gives the festival a broader appeal, from dance and electronic music fans to groups looking for a more social summer outing.

Among the more contemporary entries on the summer calendar, LMF gives Limassol an early July event aimed squarely at music fans, groups of friends and anyone looking for a festival with a stronger dance-floor feel.

Faneromeni26 Arts Festival

When: July 2 to August 27 for the outdoor cinema programme, with selected festival performances in July

Where: Bank of Cyprus Cultural Foundation, Nicosia

Info: Bank of Cyprus Cultural Foundation

Entry: Free entrance

Faneromeni26 marks 10 years of the Bank of Cyprus Cultural Foundation’s summer arts festival, bringing film, music and performance into the heart of old Nicosia.

For July and August, the easiest entry point is the outdoor summer cinema programme in the Foundation’s courtyard, with screenings including William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet, Lilo & Stitch, Big Fish and Dumbo. The wider festival also includes live performances, with July highlights such as Resonances, a musical performance by the Lyra Quartet and vocal ensemble Kalesma, and TRACKS: Echo of Now, Rhythm of Yesterday, a fusion of hip-hop, spoken word and live visuals.

The festival works well for readers looking for a central Nicosia outing rather than a large festival ground. Its mix of cinema and live performance gives the old city a steady summer cultural programme, with free entry making it one of the more accessible options on the list.

International Festival of Ancient Greek Drama

When: July 3 to August 8

Where: Curium Ancient Theatre, Paphos Ancient Odeon and Makarios III Amphitheatre, Nicosia

Tickets/info: Greek Drama Fest / SoldOut TicketBox

The International Festival of Ancient Greek Drama returns for its 29th edition, bringing ancient theatre to three of Cyprus’ most atmospheric open-air venues. This year’s programme includes productions from Spain, Latvia, Greece and Cyprus, with performances staged at Curium Ancient Theatre, Paphos Ancient Odeon and Makarios III Amphitheatre in Nicosia.

The 2026 line-up includes The Trojan Women by Euripides, Hecuba by Euripides, Lysistrata by Aristophanes, Seven Against Thebes by Aeschylus and Alcestis by Euripides. Performances begin at 21:00 and include Greek and English surtitles.

Its strength lies in the combination of productions and venues. Curium, the Paphos Odeon and the Makarios III Amphitheatre give each performance a setting that feels connected to the works themselves, making it a standout choice for anyone interested in theatre this summer.

Cyprus Rialto World Music Festival

When: July 8 to 21

Where: Rialto Theatre and selected Limassol venues

Tickets/info: Rialto Theatre / Interticket

The Cyprus Rialto World Music Festival returns to Limassol for its 21st edition, with a programme running across several July dates. Centred on the Rialto Theatre and nearby venues, the festival brings together artists working across world music, Mediterranean sounds, jazz influences and contemporary performance.

This year’s line-up includes Martha Frintzila with The Kubara Project and Kalogeraki Bros, Kobrah Habibi, Nabuma, Koza Mostra and the Cyprus Kollective Big Band. The programme gives the festival a broader musical identity than a standard concert series, with each evening offering a different sound and atmosphere.

Rialto is a good choice for readers who want something more curated than a single summer concert. Its programme moves between different traditions and styles, giving each evening its own character while keeping the festival rooted in Limassol’s cultural scene.

Minthis Music Festival

When: July 8 to 12

Where: Minthis Amphitheatre, Paphos

Tickets/info: Minthis Resort / SoldOut TicketBox

Minthis Music Festival returns to Paphos from July 8 to 12 with five evenings of music at Minthis Amphitheatre. The programme moves between contemporary classical music, piano recital, chamber music, operatic repertoire and jazz, giving each night a distinct character.

This year’s line-up opens with Florian Christl & Ensemble featuring violinist Niklas Liepe, followed by pianist Jeneba Kanneh-Mason in a Chopin night, Vision String Quartet, Austrian bass Günther Groissböck accompanied by Nelson Calzi, and Claire Martin & Band.

For readers looking for a more focused music event, Minthis offers a seated festival experience in the Paphos countryside, with a programme built around individual performances rather than a large multi-stage format.

Windcraft Music Fest 12

When: July 24 to 26

Where: Katydata, Nicosia district

Tickets/info: Windcraft Music Fest / More.com

Windcraft Music Fest returns to Katydata from July 24 to 26 for its 12th edition, bringing jazz, world music and wind instruments into one of the island’s most distinctive festival settings.

The festival is organised around the sound of wind instruments, but its programme stretches across different styles, including Balkan rhythms, folk traditions, jazz grooves and more experimental sounds. Alongside concerts, the festival also includes workshops, walks, exhibitions and other activities that make use of the village setting.

What makes Windcraft stand out is how closely it is tied to Katydata itself. Rather than feeling like a festival simply placed in a village, it uses the courtyards, squares and surrounding landscape as part of the experience, giving the event a more intimate and community-led character.

Fengaros Festival 2026

When: July 30 to August 1

Where: Petrides Farm Park, Nicosia district

Tickets/info: Fengaros

One of Cyprus’ most prominent summer festivals, Fengaros returns from July 30 to August 1 with its biggest edition to date. Taking over Petrides Farm Park in the Nicosia district, the festival brings more than 60 artists across six stages, creating one of the island’s fullest summer music weekends.

The programme moves across local and international acts, live bands, electronic sounds and alternative scenes, giving Fengaros a wider identity than a standard concert event. It is built for people who want to spend more than one evening at a festival, with camping, food and drink options and a countryside setting that helps shape the experience.

For readers looking for a proper summer festival rather than a single performance, Fengaros is one of the main names to watch. Its appeal lies in the scale of the line-up, but also in the atmosphere around it: music, camping and a full weekend away from the usual city circuit.

Taste of Cyprus Festival

When: July 31 to August 2

Where: Paphos Medieval Castle

Info: Taste of Cyprus Festival

Entry: Free entrance

Taste of Cyprus Festival comes to Paphos Medieval Castle from July 31 to August 2, bringing together Cypriot food, local culture, live music and family activities by the sea.

The event is aimed at visitors who want a relaxed festival outing rather than a fixed concert or theatre programme. With doors opening at 18:00, it is built around the kind of summer evening that works well in Kato Paphos: a walk by the harbour, food from local vendors, music and an easy setting for families or groups of friends.

The castle location gives the festival a clear sense of place, while the focus on Cypriot flavours makes it a useful stop for tourists as well as locals. It is one of the more casual entries on the list, but that is part of its appeal: simple, accessible and tied closely to the atmosphere of Paphos in summer.

Paphos BeerFest 2026

When: August 5 to 9

Where: Kato Paphos Castle

Info: Paphos Beer Festival

Entry: Free entrance

Paphos BeerFest returns to Kato Paphos Castle from August 5 to 9, bringing five days of beer, food, music and live entertainment to one of the city’s busiest summer locations.

The festival is built around a simple idea that works well in August: a waterfront setting, a wide choice of beers, street food and an evening programme designed for an easy night out. Its location near the harbour also makes it practical for visitors staying in Paphos, as well as locals looking for a casual summer event.

With its central location and easy format, Paphos BeerFest is the kind of event readers can drop into without much planning. It works especially well for those already in the area, adding a lively food-and-drink stop to the August calendar.

Anti-Skino Festival

When: August 28 and 29

Where: Val’s Place, Yialia, Paphos district

Tickets/info: More.com

Anti-Skino Festival marks its 10th edition on August 28 and 29, moving to Val’s Place in Yialia for a two-day programme of theatre, performing arts, workshops and gatherings in nature.

The festival has built its identity around performances outside conventional theatre spaces, giving room to new, emerging and established artists to present work in a more open setting. This year’s edition takes the event to the Paphos coast, between Argaka and Pomos, with Val’s Place becoming the meeting point for artists and audiences across the weekend.

The full programme is still to be announced, but organisers and event listings describe a mix of shows, artistic interventions, participatory acts, nature-based workshops and a closing party with Usurum. It is a fitting final entry for the guide: less mainstream than the larger music and food festivals, but very much part of Cyprus’ summer cultural map.

As dates, ticketing and programmes can change during the season, visitors should check the organisers’ pages before travelling.