Visiteur
Commercial partnership. This article contains affiliate links. If you book through these links, Pixidia earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. Learn more

Latitude Festival 2026 marks its 20th anniversary from 23 to 26 July at Henham Park in Suffolk, headlined by David Byrne, Lewis Capaldi and Teddy Swims. Beyond the music, ten arenas cover comedy, theatre, poetry and dance, which is exactly why it’s earned a reputation as one of the UK’s most family-friendly festivals. Budget around £672 in tickets for two adults and two kids aged 5 to 12, general camping included. Travelling in from outside the UK? Most visa-exempt visitors now need the UK ETA (about £20) well before departure — it’s been mandatory since April 2025.

Mention Latitude and most people picture guitars and headline sets — fair enough, but that’s only half the story. Back in 2006, it became the only major UK festival brave enough to hand poetry an entire stage of its own. Twenty years on, that multi-arts identity — comedy, theatre, dance, science — combined with a family offer built around three free zones, makes it a genuinely solid choice for a first family festival in the UK.

Latitude 2026: a multi-arts festival celebrating 20 years at Henham Park

Lake surrounded by lush green forest, typical scenery of the Henham Park estate in Suffolk
Photo by Mr. Pugo on Unsplash

Henham Park: five centuries in the same family

23-26 July 2026 Henham Park, Southwold About 45,000 festival-goers 20th edition

Launched in 2006 with Snow Patrol and Mogwai headlining, Latitude Festival marks its 20th edition in 2026 — it’s only ever been cancelled once, in 2020, for the pandemic. According to the official site, it runs from Thursday 23 to Sunday 26 July 2026 at Henham Park, a 4,200-acre estate the Rous family has owned without interruption since 1544. The 2026 headliners are David Byrne (Talking Heads), Lewis Capaldi and Teddy Swims, but reducing Latitude to its music lineup alone would miss the point.

Ten arts arenas, not just a music festival

Right from its first edition in 2006, Latitude was the first UK festival to hand poetry an entire stage of its own, an initiative director Melvin Benn entrusted to East Anglian poet Luke Wright. According to the festival’s About Us page, it now runs ten distinct arts arenas (comedy, theatre, poetry, literature, dance, cabaret) alongside its music stages, including the Waterfront Stage, a floating stage on the estate’s lake that has hosted work by choreographer Matthew Bourne. It’s this range, more than the music bill alone, that’s earned Latitude its reputation as one of the UK’s most family-friendly festivals, alongside Camp Bestival.

One family who’s done both put it simply: with around 45,000 festival-goers against 220,000, Latitude is a lot easier to navigate with young kids than Glastonbury, where we cover camping and shuttle buses for a first festival in a separate guide.

Highlights

  • Ten arts arenas (comedy, theatre, poetry, literature, dance, cabaret), alongside the music stages
  • The first UK festival to dedicate a full stage to poetry, back in 2006
  • Waterfront Stage, a floating stage set on the estate’s lake
Pixidia tip: if you’re torn between UK festivals, Latitude’s smaller scale (around 45,000 festival-goers across the weekend) makes it easier to manage with young children than an event like Glastonbury.
Scroby Sands Seal Watching, departing from Lowestoft From £49
Book my seal-watching trip

The family offer: three free zones, built for every age

Children relaxing in a hammock in the woods, the kind of nature setting found near a festival's family zones
Photo by Alexandr Podvalny on Unsplash

Kids Area, Enchanted Garden, Camp Greenpeace: the heart of the family offer

Kids Area 10am-6pm Free family zones Dedicated 12-16 teen zone Welfare Tent, 24/7

According to the festival’s family information page, the offer is built around three distinct zones, all near the central lake and almost entirely free (only the funfair charges): the Kids Area (10am-6pm, craft workshops, puppets, magic, a baby and toddler tent), the Enchanted Garden (9am-4pm, built into the family campsite, painting, morning yoga, silent disco) and Camp Greenpeace (bushcraft, a zip-line, tree climbing, run by Greenpeace volunteers). On top of that, there’s a zone strictly for 12-16 year-olds, the Inbetweeners’ Area, which draws 5,000 to 6,000 teens each edition for music, fashion and tech workshops.

Safety and finding each other: what the festival has in place for parents

Family camping is a separate zone, reserved for groups travelling with at least one child or teenager aged 16 or under, with its own toilets and direct access to the Enchanted Garden. Latitude recommends every family write a parent’s phone number in permanent marker on their child’s wristband, and offers a specific wristband (the « Authorised Unaccompanied Wristband ») for 10-12 year-olds allowed to move between the campsite and the arena alone. A Welfare Tent stays open 24/7 for anything practical, and a baby-carrier lending library is available at the Enchanted Garden for families with infants.

Highlights

  • Three free family zones: Kids Area, Enchanted Garden, Camp Greenpeace
  • Named wristband with a parent’s phone number, recommended by the festival
  • Welfare Tent open 24/7 for any emergency or practical question
  • Dedicated 12-16 zone (Inbetweeners’ Area), away from both adults and toddlers
Pixidia tip: agree on a meeting point in case you get separated before you even walk onto the site — the Enchanted Garden entrance or the Kids Area’s helter-skelter both work well, since most families already use them as landmarks.

Budget, tickets and camping options

White tent pitched in a grassy field, illustrating general camping at a festival
Photo by Kyle Johnson on Unsplash

How much does a family weekend cost?

~£672 for 2 adults + 2 kids Adult weekend: £308 General camping included General sale: November 2025

According to the official price list for 2026, an adult weekend ticket with general camping costs £308, an accompanied teen ticket (13-15) is £190, a child ticket (5-12) is £28, and under-5s go free. For a typical family of two adults and two kids aged 5 to 12, budget around £672 in tickets alone. With two teens aged 13 to 15 instead, that climbs to around £996.

Ticket type (weekend + general camping)Price
Adult£308
Accompanied teen (13-15)£190
Child (5-12)£28
Under 5Free
Day campsite ticket£15 / person

General camping, family camping or premium options

The weekend ticket includes general camping, where everyone brings their own tent. Family camping, covered above, is free as soon as your group includes a child or teenager aged 16 or under. For families who’d rather not carry anything, comfort options exist (Pink Moon, Latitude Luxury), with tents already pitched, upgraded toilets and sometimes catering included. These premium packages run well above general camping prices and vary with availability — check current rates when you book rather than trusting a fixed figure.

Highlights

  • Under-5s go free, with a reduced child rate up to age 12
  • Instalment payment offered during certain sale windows
  • Family camping kept separate from general camping, with dedicated toilets
Check before you book: exact prices for day tickets and premium accommodation packages shift from one edition to the next depending on availability. Confirm current rates on the official site before finalising your budget.

Southwold and getting to Henham Park

Row of colourful beach huts typical of the English coastline, near Southwold in Suffolk
Photo by Amy W. on Unsplash

Southwold and the coast: make a weekend of it

Southwold: 4-5 km away ~15 direct trains a day from London ~2h30 drive from London via the A12 Big Green Coach from London, from £64

A few kilometres from the site, Southwold is a natural stop before or after the festival: a pier with Tim Hunkin’s arcade games, a beach lined with colourful huts, crabbing off the pier, a lighthouse open for tours, and a maize maze that conveniently runs from July to September. A little further on, the RSPB Minsmere nature reserve runs activities built for kids (pond-dipping, pushchair-friendly trails) at family-friendly prices.

Getting to Henham Park: trains, coach or car

Greater Anglia runs frequent direct services from London Liverpool Street towards Darsham and Saxmundham on the East Suffolk Line, roughly 15 trains a day each way, with advance fares from about £12 and £13.50 one-way. For festival weekend itself, the timing matters: catch the Festival Transfer Bus from Diss if you leave London before 17:45 on the Thursday or Friday (buses run 09:00-19:15), or head to Halesworth if you leave after 17:45 (buses run 19:20-23:20). Darsham stays the closest mainline station as the crow flies, about a 15-20 minute taxi ride from the site, though its shuttle network is lighter than Halesworth’s.

Big Green Coach, the festival’s official coach partner, picks up in London at Stratford and Victoria Coach Station, with a three-day pass from £64. Driving takes around 2h30 from London via the A12 northbound from Ipswich — follow the temporary festival signage rather than your sat-nav, since you’ll enter via Red Gate 2 or Red Gate 3 depending on your ticket. Parking is included in your ticket price, in fields kept separate from the campsites; Family Camping ticket-holders get their own Family Car Park close by. Coming from outside the UK? Factor in the UK ETA (about £20, valid two years, mandatory since April 2025 for most visa-exempt nationalities) well ahead of travel — worth pairing with a local eSIM and travel insurance, both covered in the practical section below.

Highlights

  • Southwold, 4-5 km away: beach, pier, maize maze open through summer
  • RSPB Minsmere nature reserve, reachable by car, family-friendly prices
  • Direct trains from London to Darsham and Saxmundham, plus an official Big Green Coach service
Pixidia tip: two of the last three editions have seen heavy rain, with long queues at entry on the busiest days. Pack wellies and something waterproof no matter how kind the July forecast looks.

Practical info for Latitude Festival travellers

Travel Insurance, SafetyWing

Between the ticket price and the documented rain risk on past editions, cancellation and weather cover takes the edge off any nasty surprises.

Nomad Insurance from $56 / 4 weeks
Get covered

Frequently asked questions

What are the dates of Latitude Festival 2026?

The festival runs from Thursday 23 to Sunday 26 July 2026 at Henham Park, near Southwold in Suffolk, according to the official site.

How much does a family weekend cost at Latitude Festival?

For two adults and two kids aged 5 to 12, budget around £672 for a weekend ticket with general camping (£308 per adult, £28 per child). With two teens aged 13 to 15 instead, that climbs to around £996, according to the official price list.

Is family camping different from general camping?

Yes. Family camping is a separate zone, reserved for groups travelling with at least one child or teenager aged 16 or under, with its own toilets and direct access to the Enchanted Garden.

How do I get to Henham Park without a car from London?

There’s no single direct train, but Greater Anglia runs frequent services from London Liverpool Street towards Darsham and Saxmundham, with a Festival Transfer Bus from Diss or Halesworth depending on when you travel. Big Green Coach also runs a direct service from London Stratford and Victoria, according to East Suffolk Lines.

Do overseas visitors need a visa for Latitude Festival in 2026?

UK and Irish residents don’t need anything extra. Other visa-exempt visitors generally don’t need a traditional visa for a tourist stay under six months either, but most now need the UK ETA (about £20, valid two years), mandatory since April 2025.

Is there more to Latitude Festival than live music?

Yes: ten arts arenas cover comedy, theatre, poetry, literature, dance and cabaret. Latitude was in fact the first UK festival to give poetry its own full stage, back in 2006, according to the festival’s About Us page.

Sources

Information verified on 1 July 2026.

Fancy more ideas for your next escape this summer?

Pixidia helps you build tailor-made itineraries to explore the UK and beyond. Check out our guides and find your family’s next adventure.

Discover more destinations

Explore our travel magazine

Hundreds of articles, guides and inspiration for your next trips around the world.

Discover the magazine
Vos préférences ont été enregistrées.