Del Poble Fest
- 2 days ago
- 2 min read

Suncream? Check. Sunglasses? Check. Emotional readiness for two days of shouting lyrics with strangers while holding a lukewarm beer? Questionable—but that’s exactly the point. Welcome to Del Poble Fest, the Valencian love letter to live music, long afternoons, and the beautiful chaos of summer done properly. On June 19–20, 2026, the laid-back coastal calm of Tavernes de la Valldigna gets hijacked—in the best possible way—by a festival that’s basically what would happen if your local fiestas suddenly booked half of Spanish radio and turned the volume up to “regret.” This is only the second edition, but don’t let that fool you—the first one pulled in over 17,000 people, so the secret’s already out. Now it’s back, bigger, louder, and with a tan line.
We’re talking a crowd-pleasing, arms-in-the-air, sing-every-word kind of lineup. Confirmed names include:
Loquillo bringing pure rock ‘n’ roll swagger, Taburete serving up indie-pop anthems, Álvaro de Luna for emotional singalongs at sunset, Beret ready to break hearts and fix them again and just when you thought it couldn’t get more stacked, additions like Malú and Fangoria crank things up another notch.
Set across a sprawling 25,000 m² site with two stages, VIP zones, and a dangerously tempting food setup, this isn’t just about music—it’s about the full sensory overload. There’s even a next-level street food concept thrown into the mix, because nothing says “festival” like debating life choices over gourmet burgers at 2am.
While other festivals are busy building influencer zones and charging €12 for water, Del Poble Fest is leaning hard into something rarer: actual atmosphere. It’s designed to bring back that pueblo spirit—music, community, chaos, and the kind of night where you end up singing with someone you met 30 seconds ago like you’ve known them since 2003. Del Poble Fest isn’t trying to be the coolest festival in Spain. It’s trying to be the most fun—and honestly, that’s a much better goal.
For tickets and more information: Del Poble Festival














Comments