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The Aix-en-Provence Festival 2026 runs from 2 to 21 July — its 78th edition. Five staged productions are on the programme, including Die Frau ohne Schatten by Strauss with Klaus Mäkelä making his pit debut, and the world premiere of Accabadora by Francesco Filidei. Tickets range from €10 (youth rate) to €312 (premium category). This edition was entirely conceived by Pierre Audi, who passed away in May 2025 — it stands as his artistic legacy. Book now at festival-aix.com; the best seats go within hours of release.

This July 2026, the courtyard of the Archbishop’s Palace is set for an extraordinary edition. The 78th Festival International d’Art Lyrique d’Aix-en-Provence brings together some of the most sought-after artists on the international opera circuit, in a programme conceived entirely by Pierre Audi — the director who died suddenly in Beijing in May 2025. Beneath the centuries-old plane trees of the Cours Mirabeau, this Provençal city of 150,000 becomes, for twenty days, the world capital of opera. Here’s everything you need to know before booking your trip from the UK.

1. The five staged productions of July 2026

Illuminated opera stage during an evening performance
Photo by Andrea Zanenga on Unsplash

Die Frau ohne Schatten (Strauss) — the event of the summer

€32 to €312 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 July Grand Théâtre de Provence Klaus Mäkelä’s pit debut

The flagship production of this edition is unquestionably Die Frau ohne Schatten by Richard Strauss, staged by Barrie Kosky with sets by Michael Levine. According to festival-aix.com, conductor Klaus Mäkelä — leading the Orchestre de Paris — specifically chose this opera for his first proper pit debut. The cast features Michael Spyres (Emperor), Vida Miknevičiūtė (Empress), Nina Stemme in the fearsome role of the Nurse, Brian Mulligan and Tamara Wilson. Rarely staged in France, this work is considered one of the most demanding in the Germanic repertoire — a rarity well worth the journey from London.

Highlights

  • Klaus Mäkelä — one of the most talked-about conductors of his generation — makes his pit debut
  • Nina Stemme, the world’s pre-eminent Wagnerian soprano, in the role of the Nurse
  • Barrie Kosky, Artistic Director of Komische Oper Berlin, delivers a visionary yet pared-back staging
  • Indoor venue (1,382 seats): no risk of weather cancellation
Pixidia tip: premium categories (Cat+ at €312, Cat1 at €160) for Die Frau ohne Schatten almost certainly sold out at the February opening. Check the official ticket exchange on festival-aix.com — open since 7 April 2026 — for resale seats between audience members.
Provençal stone quarry at night used as an open-air performance space under the stars
Photo by Pierre Goiffon on Unsplash

Die Zauberflöte (Mozart) — The Magic Flute under the Provençal stars

€32 to €312 2–21 July (multiple performances) Théâtre de l’Archevêché (open-air) Sabine Devieilhe’s farewell to the role

The opening production and spine of the programme, The Magic Flute brings together Leonardo García-Alarcón conducting the Cappella Mediterranea and director Clément Cogitore. According to ConcertClassic, Cogitore creates a staging between « fairground booth and magic lantern », centred on childhood and transmission. The personal event: Sabine Devieilhe sings the Queen of the Night for the ninth and final time in her career. Ying Fang (Pamina), Mauro Peter (Tamino) and Brindley Sherratt (Sarastro) complete an outstanding cast. The Théâtre de l’Archevêché — a garden courtyard surrounded by plane trees — has been the festival’s iconic open-air venue since 1948, and is unique in Europe.

Highlights

  • Sabine Devieilhe’s final Queen of the Night — an unrepeatable moment in operatic history
  • García-Alarcón, the indispensable specialist in baroque repertoire, conducts Mozart on period instruments
  • The Théâtre de l’Archevêché — an open-air courtyard of 1,350 seats — under the July stars
Weather note: the Archevêché is open-air. In the event of rain, a performance may be cancelled or relocated. Refunds are available until 30 September 2026. The Grand Théâtre de Provence is fully covered — no weather risk.
Intimate theatre stage lit for a contemporary chamber opera
Photo by Camille Roux on Unsplash

Accabadora (Filidei), world premiere + Requiem (Castellucci)

€32 to €128 4–12 July Théâtre du Jeu de Paume World premiere

The contemporary discovery of this 78th edition is Accabadora, a chamber opera by Sardinian composer Francesco Filidei, receiving its world premiere. According to festival-aix.com, the work is inspired by Michela Murgia’s novel about the « accabadora » — the old woman who helped the dying on their way in rural 1950s Sardinia. The staging is by Valentina Carrasco, with Noa Frenkel in the lead role. The Théâtre du Jeu de Paume (620 seats, 18th century) amplifies the intimacy of this story of passing. Alongside the four performances of Accabadora comes the revival of Mozart’s Requiem in Romeo Castellucci’s « legendary » production (created at Aix in 2019), with Raphaël Pichon and Ensemble Pygmalion: according to Inferno Magazine, Castellucci returns after seven years with an extended narrative arc « aligned with the chaotic trajectory of the world ».

Highlights

  • World premiere of Accabadora — a work that has never been performed anywhere before
  • Castellucci’s Requiem: a production unanimously praised by the international press in 2019
  • Accessible ticket prices at the Jeu de Paume: from €32 (€10 youth rate)
Pixidia tip: if you’re only catching one contemporary opera this summer, Accabadora is the obvious choice — it’s the only chance to hear this work in its very first life. Seats at the Jeu de Paume are more affordable than at the Grand Théâtre.
Luberon Villages Half-Day Tour from Aix-en-Provence From €110
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2. The recitals and concerts not to miss

Vocal recital with accompanist pianist on stage
Photo by Obie Fernandez on Unsplash

Sixteen concerts and recitals from 6 to 20 July

€16 to €128 6–20 July Conservatoire Darius Milhaud + GTP 16 events

The recital programme is unusually dense. According to OperaWire, the 2026 season brings Benjamin Bernheim (8 July), Michael Spyres in late-Romantic Lieder (13 July), Sonya Yoncheva for her festival debut with García-Alarcón (14 July), and Ailyn Pérez in a Mozartian Heroines programme (17 July). Among the standouts: Pierre-Laurent Aimard gives a two-concert residency at the Conservatoire Darius Milhaud, including the French premiere of a work by Mark Andre. On 18 July, Samara Joy — six Grammy Awards — brings the Great American Songbook to the heart of an opera festival. And on 7 July, Klangforum Wien explores post-Soviet women composers in a programme titled « Tower of Babel ».

Highlights

  • Samara Joy (jazz vocals, 6 Grammys) — a genuine rarity at a classical festival
  • Pierre-Laurent Aimard, the defining pianist of 20th-century music, in two separate concerts
  • Festival debuts of Sonya Yoncheva and Ailyn Pérez — two sopranos at the peak of their careers
  • Recital tickets far more affordable than operas: from €16 (€8 youth)
Pixidia tip: recitals at the Conservatoire Darius Milhaud (around 300 seats) are an incredibly intimate format — you’ll hear the singers in exceptional acoustic conditions. On a tighter budget, it’s the best deal the festival offers.

3. Aix en juin: 39 free events before the festival

Provençal summer landscape, golden light over the fields near Aix-en-Provence
Photo by Victoria Munier on Unsplash

12–30 June: an open door to the festival

Free (booking required) 12–30 June 2026 Aix-en-Provence & surroundings ~15,000 expected visitors

« Aix en juin » is the free pre-festival programme designed to lower the barrier to entry. According to the city of Aix, the 2026 edition offers around 39 events from 12 to 30 June: musical opening at Place des Prêcheurs on 12 June (7:30 pm), masterclasses by Pierre-Laurent Aimard and soprano Dorothea Röschmann, a circus-theatre show by Compagnie Rasposo (« Orfeo vacilla », 21–25 June), film screenings paired with the July operas, and a closing concert on 29 June on the Cours Mirabeau with the soloists of The Magic Flute under García-Alarcón. Even free events require booking, available since 4 June 2026 on festival-aix.com. Worth considering if you’re planning a longer stay in Provence.

Highlights

  • Free public masterclasses by world-class artists
  • « Parade[s] » closing concert on the Cours Mirabeau: Magic Flute soloists in the open air
  • Festival access without a paid ticket — ideal for soaking up the atmosphere
Pixidia tip: if you’re in Aix in late June, the « Parade[s] » concert on 29 June on the Cours Mirabeau is a perfect warm-up before the July operas — free, open-air, with the singers who’ll be on stage just days later.

4. Tickets and prices: how to plan your trip

Grand theatre foyer with elegantly dressed audience before the performance
Photo by Michal Parzuchowski on Unsplash

2026 ticket prices: €10 to €312

€10 to €312 depending on category -30% youth rate (ages 8–30) +33 (0)4 34 08 02 17 festival-aix.com

According to the festival’s official website, the 2026 pricing runs from €32 (Cat6) to €312 (Cat+) for the main productions. Chamber operas at the Jeu de Paume (Accabadora, El Cimarrón) start at €32, capping at €128. Nearly 40% of seats are priced below €60. Youth rates (ages 8–30) represent 30% of the adult price across all categories above €29 — meaning opera from €10 and concerts from €8. An Opéra ON programme for 18–30 year-olds offered tickets at €10 (operas) and €8 (concerts) from 22 May 2026. Note: prices are in euros; at current rates, €100 is approximately £85 — comparable to West End theatre tickets for a once-in-a-lifetime performance.

ProductionAdult (price range)Youth rate (ages 8–30)
Die Frau ohne Schatten / Requiem€32 to €312€10 to €93
Die Zauberflöte€32 to €312€10 to €93
Accabadora€32 to €128€10 to €38
El Cimarrón€32 to €98€10 to €29
Vêpres siciliennes (concert version)€32 to €195€10 to €58
Recitals (Conservatoire)€16 to €48€8

Highlights

  • Online booking at festival-aix.com: e-ticket recommended to skip the queue
  • Booking fee: €3.50 per order (not per ticket)
  • Audience ticket exchange open since 7 April 2026
  • Box office in person: Palais de l’Archevêché, Place des Martyrs de la Résistance, Aix-en-Provence
Pixidia tip: in June 2026, lower-category seats are still available for most operas, and recitals remain well-stocked. Check the online box office directly for current availability — mid-range categories can reappear as cancellations come through.

5. Aix-en-Provence during the festival: the city and day trips

Perched village of Gordes in the Luberon with lavender fields in summer
Photo by Chelsea Essig on Unsplash

Aix the Provençal: the Cours Mirabeau, Cézanne and the Nuits d’Aix

28–32°C in July Fly from Gatwick to Marseille (~2 hrs) 2-night stay + 1 opera: approx. €300–400/person 150,000 inhabitants

Aix-en-Provence is a perfectly sized city — labelled Ville d’Art et d’Histoire — known for its 40-plus fountains and the Cours Mirabeau. According to the tourism office, this 440-metre avenue lined with centuries-old plane trees (planted in 1830) is the festival-goers’ meeting point before and after performances. Three historic fountains punctuate it, including the mossy Fontaine Moussue (a thermal spring at 18°C since 1667). During the festival, the Nuits d’Aix night market runs free from 6 July to 23 August (6 pm–11 pm, Monday to Saturday), with artisans, designers and local producers. The Cathédrale Saint-Sauveur is worth a visit for its seven centuries of layered architecture and Nicolas Froment’s Triptych of the Burning Bush (1476). To plan a full Provence itinerary, Pixidia offers suggestions tailored to the length of your stay.

Highlights

  • Atelier Cézanne (9 avenue Paul Cézanne): open 9 am–6 pm, €9.50 — the studio Cézanne built in 1901
  • Montagne Sainte-Victoire: Grand Site de France, 250 km of trails, Cézanne’s obsession (80+ paintings)
  • Cassis and the Calanques: 30 minutes by car — a perfect morning excursion on a performance-free day
  • Château La Coste (15 km): wine estate with contemporary art and architecture by Tadao Ando and Jean Nouvel
Pixidia tip: the Provençal market runs Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings (Cours Mirabeau + Place des Prêcheurs). For festival-goers with evening performances, the ideal rhythm is: market in the morning, day trip in the afternoon, performance in the evening. Book your accommodation at least 3–6 months ahead for July.
Côtes de Provence Wine Tour from Aix (full day) From €105
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6. 78 years of opera: the history and context of 2026

Salzburg during its summer festival — baroque old town aerial view
Photo by Martti Salmi on Unsplash

From 1948 to Pierre Audi’s artistic legacy

Founded in 1948 Budget €23.1M in 2026 Birgit Nilsson Prize 2025 ~64,000 audience members in 2025

Founded in 1948 by Gabriel Dussurget and Countess Lily Pastré, the festival anchored its identity around Mozart from the very start. According to Wikipedia, the inaugural performance was Così fan tutte in the Archbishop’s courtyard, conducted by Hans Rosbaud. Since then, the festival has produced landmark premieres — among them George Benjamin’s Written on Skin (2012), which has since toured the world. In October 2025, it became the first cultural institution to receive the Birgit Nilsson Prize ($1 million) according to the Birgit Nilsson Foundation. The 2026 edition is marked by grief and continuity: Pierre Audi, director since 2018, died suddenly in Beijing on the night of 2–3 May 2025, aged 67. This entire edition is his conception. Ted Huffman, the American director who staged five productions at the Academy from 2012, has taken over as General Director from 1 January 2026 for a five-year term.

Highlights

  • One of Europe’s three great summer opera festivals — alongside Salzburg and Glyndebourne
  • Co-productions with the Metropolitan Opera, Covent Garden, Paris Opéra and Staatsoper Berlin
  • Birgit Nilsson Prize 2025: the first cultural institution (not an individual) to receive this award
Pixidia tip: this 78th edition carries a particular emotional weight. The entire programme was conceived by Pierre Audi before his death — so every production you attend is part of his final artistic statement. That gives it a depth unlike any ordinary festival year. To discover other cultural festivals in France, see our dedicated section.

Practical information

Frequently asked questions

When does the Aix-en-Provence Festival 2026 take place?

The 78th Festival International d’Art Lyrique d’Aix-en-Provence runs from 2 to 21 July 2026. The free « Aix en juin » pre-festival programme starts earlier, from 12 to 30 June 2026, with around 39 events requiring online booking. See the official website festival-aix.com.

How do I buy tickets for the Aix-en-Provence Festival 2026?

Tickets are available online at festival-aix.com (secure booking, e-ticket recommended), by phone on +33 (0)4 34 08 02 17, or in person at the Palais de l’Archevêché box office (Place des Martyrs de la Résistance, 13100 Aix-en-Provence). A booking fee of €3.50 applies per order. An audience ticket exchange has been open since 7 April 2026 for resale between attendees.

How much do opera tickets cost in 2026?

Tickets for the main operas (The Magic Flute, Die Frau ohne Schatten, Requiem) range from €32 (Cat6) to €312 (Cat+). Accabadora and El Cimarrón at the Théâtre du Jeu de Paume: €32 to €128. Youth rates (ages 8–30) are around 30% of the adult price — opera from €10, concerts from €8. Nearly 40% of all seats are priced below €60. At current exchange rates, £1 ≈ €1.17. See official ticket prices.

Which performance should you not miss at the Aix Festival 2026?

Die Frau ohne Schatten by Strauss (3–15 July) is the headline event: Klaus Mäkelä makes his pit debut, with Nina Stemme, in one of the most demanding works in the lyric repertoire. The Magic Flute with Sabine Devieilhe singing her ninth and final Queen of the Night is an unrepeatable moment. The world premiere of Filidei’s Accabadora is the contemporary discovery. On a tighter budget, recitals at the Conservatoire Darius Milhaud (from €16) offer comparable artistic quality in an intimate setting.

How do you get to Aix-en-Provence from the UK?

By air: easyJet operates up to 14 direct flights per week from London Gatwick to Marseille Provence Airport (MRS, ~2 hours). From Marseille Airport, the A2 shuttle bus reaches Aix-en-Provence city centre in around 45 minutes. By train: Eurostar from London St Pancras to Lille or Paris, then TGV to Aix-en-Provence TGV station — total journey approximately 6.5–7 hours. From Aix TGV station, the A2 navette (shuttle bus) reaches the town centre in 20 minutes. By car from Calais: approximately 10–11 hours. See transport information from the tourism office.

Is there a risk of cancellation at the Archevêché?

Yes. The Théâtre de l’Archevêché is an open-air courtyard. In the event of rain, a performance may be cancelled or relocated. Refunds or rescheduling are provided in that case. Tickets cancelled due to weather are refundable until 30 September 2026. The Grand Théâtre de Provence — where Die Frau ohne Schatten and concert versions are performed — is fully covered, with no weather risk whatsoever.

Do the free Aix en juin events require booking?

Yes. Even the free events in the « Aix en juin » programme (12–30 June 2026) require online booking at festival-aix.com. Registrations for main events have been open since 4 June 2026, and for artistic workshops since 10 June 2026. Entry is free but places are limited.

What’s the budget for a festival weekend in Aix-en-Provence from the UK?

For a long weekend (2 nights + 1 performance), budget roughly €300–400 per person in the economical version: Cat3 ticket (~€141), 3-star accommodation €100–140/night for two, Gatwick–Marseille easyJet return from ~£60–80, meals ~€50–75. The comfortable option runs to €700 and above. Recitals (from €16) and youth rates (opera from €10) can cut ticket costs significantly.

Sources

Research conducted 10 June 2026. Check festival-aix.com for the latest seat availability.

Ready for the festival?

Aix-en-Provence in July is twenty days where an entire city lives to the rhythm of opera. Whether you’re a lifelong opera devotee or simply curious, this 78th edition has something for you — from the world premiere of Accabadora to recitals from €16. Plan your Provence trip with Pixidia.

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