The Sun is back. On May 24, 2026, Gardens of West in New West will be full again. Fifteen thousand visitors, house and techno, a green spot on the edge of the city and a day of dancing that starts as soon as the Whitsun weekend gets underway. That long weekend was not chosen by chance.
About the people behind The Sun, the organizers make few announcements. There is no known founder, no producer to the fore, no face to the festival. That suits the approach: De Zon prefers to work with the mystique rather than the marketing story. The secret programming is consistent with this - even the names of the artists remain unknown until just before the day. What you know is that year after year there is a team that gets fifteen thousand people on their feet on Pentecost Sunday. That's not a coincidence, that's just good organizing.

The concept of The Sun is deliberately simple: one day, outdoors, house and techno, fixed date. The choice of Pentecost Sunday is no accident. It's the first day of a long weekend, the sun is high if you're lucky and you don't have to get up early the next day. The festival matches that: no multi-day camping, no tent poles or sleep deprivation. You go for a day, you dance, you go home again. You go for the festival itself, not for one name on the poster - who's playing you only decide afterwards. That's exactly the attitude The Sun counts on.
You go for the festival itself, not for one name on the poster - who's playing will only matter to you afterwards.
In the Amsterdam festival calendar, The Sun has won a permanent place. Pentecost Sunday is its date, Gardens of West is its venue, house and techno are its genres. The announcement of 2026 as its return makes expectations greater than an ordinary edition. New West is not the obvious festival neighborhood - that's more the center or the IJ area - but De Zon, with fifteen thousand visitors a year, shows that this park can handle that role just fine. Whether May 24 will really be as the name promises is up to the weather.