Holland Festival is not a "just a night out" festival. It is the kind of program you adjust your weekly schedule to, because there are things happening here that you don't normally see: great theater makers, musical theater that doesn't fit neatly into a box anywhere, dance, film and performances that either grab you completely or make your head spin. The latter is often the reason why it sticks.
The festival has been around since 1947 and was created after the war based on the idea that art can do something that politics rarely succeeds at: bring people together without everyone having to think alike. You can still feel that line today. The Holland Festival does not opt for "safely beautiful," but for work where makers are given room to take risks - and so are you as a visitor.

In 2026, there is an extra clear capstone: the associate artist is Hildur Guðnadóttir (known for her compositions for film and her own work as a composer/performer). This is exactly the kind of choice that typifies the festival: not just big titles, but creators with their own handwriting that you can live in for an evening.
You don't buy a ticket here for "entertainment," but for an evening that will leave you talking.
Practical (with no manual vibe): as a local, tackle it smartly. Choose one performance by name (something you're sure you want) and one by feel (something you don't know anything about yet). Then you'll experience the festival the way it was intended: surprise alongside certainty. And if you're under 39, HF Young often pays off - not as a "discount trick," but because it pulls you into the depths just a little easier with additional context and activities.
The full program will follow in early March. Until then, you can already book the first announced productions, so you won't have only the "leftovers" afterwards. Holland Festival is in June, scattered in various places in and around the city - and just that wandering between venues is half the charm.