
- This event has passed.
Sadly the Cambridge Folk Festival has been cancelled for 2025 just like WOMAD. Despite making a loss in 2024, organisers say they will channel their resources in planning a bounce back for 2026. The following relates to the 2024 festival. We will update it for 2026.
Set within the Edenic woodland of Cherry Hinton Park, the Cambridge Folk Festival continues to place one quality above all others: the power and authenticity of the performer and their ability to communicate with an audience.
This year’s line-up is typically strong featuring: Robert Plant, Oysterband, Nitin Sawhney and Ralph McTell.

“For me one of the true pleasures of the festival is walking from stage to stage, from the Club Tent to Stage Two to The Den – which is our emerging talent stage – and being blown away by an act you’ve never heard of,” says says Cambridge Folk Festival Operations Manager, Becky Stewart.
“An artist might be unknown and playing to a handful of people one year, then on a big stage few years on. Jake Bugg headlined a couple of year’s ago but when he first played Cambridge we payed him £50 and he turned up late because his car had broken down.”
One off the joys of Cambridge is the way established names and lesser-knowns jostle together.
“There’s no feeling of hierarchy,” says Neil. “We’re also one of the few festivals that encourages the audience to make music. We put on sessions in the evening, we say bring your guitar, it’s a safe environment. That’s very much within the tradition.”
Cambridge Folk Festival lineup
For a full lineup, click here.
Cambridge Folk Festival Campsite
The festival campsite is a short stroll from the main arena. It has all the necessary facilities including a bar, creche and paddling pool. There is a secondary campsite 1.5 miles away. For further details, click here.
Cambridge Folk Festival Tickets
Tickets vary in price depending upon whether you are attending for one day or the whole festival. The full-festival ticket costs £230. Click here for more information on pricing, and here to buy tickets.
Words by Robert Spellman and Mark Bibby Jackson.