Edinburgh Festivals: What's On in 2025

2025 DatesFormed in the shadow of a worldwide cataclysm, our first festivals in 1947 sought to use culture as a healing balm to bring peoples and nations together in celebration of our common humanity and help ‘the flowering of the human spirit’. Over the years these festivals have been joined by others to create the 11 that today represent the worldwide phenomenon that is the Edinburgh Festivals. So what have we got in store for you in 2025?

Spring/Early Summer

Edinburgh Science Festival [05 to 20 April]

The Edinburgh Science Festival was the world's first such festival when it launched in 1989. Today it remains the UK’s largest Science Festival and for 2 weeks each year - centred around the Easter break - offers a range of amazing and fun experiences for all ages, with a programme of exhibitions, events, workshops, performances, screenings and discussions between some of the world's foremost scientific minds in venues across the city. The 2025 programme will launch on 18 February with the theme Spaceship Earth, exploring the challenges of living on a planet with finite resources, through the lenses of science fiction and space exploration. A few shows are already on sale, including the appearnce of one of the world's most eminent writers and thinkers, Prof Richard Dawkins for his last tour on the road.

Edinburgh International Children's Festival [24 May to 01 June]

The Edinburgh International Children's Festival is an 8-day festival offering innovative family-friendly theatre and dance for young audiences. Every year the programme delivers performances with big ideas, epic stories and flamboyant physicality which will help young audiences make sense of our sometimes-conflicted world. The often visually striking productions take place in theatres and community centres across the city, and the Festival opens with a day of free-pop-up performances in the National Museum of Scotland. The 2025 programme, to be launched on 25 March, will feature 12 productions from 7 countries with a Spotlight on Flanders, a small region with a mighty output and a big reputation for quality and risk taking in theatre for young audiencs. The programme will also feature two new Scottish commissions: Tongue Twister is one man’s attempt to say tongue twisters in as many different languages as possible, while The Unlikely Friendship of Feather Boy and Tentacle Girl is the fantastical and touching story of two outsiders.

Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival [11 July to 20 July]

For over 45 years, the Edinburgh Jazz & Blues Festival has provided a platform to showcase the very best jazz and blues artists that the world has to offer. Held over 10 days and with over 130 performances a year the festival is one of the largest jazz festivals in Europe, creating moving and memorable experiences for both residents of the city and visitors from around the globe.  The Festival attracts major international jazz names from all over the world, as well as from the burgeoning Scottish contemporary jazz scene - and the free Mardi Gras and Carnival events during the opening weekend of the festival provide the real feel-good factor that every jazz festival hopes for. The 2025 programme will launch in April with a few headline shows already on sale, including the ever-popular Jools Holland & his Rhythm & Blues Orchestra who will perform on Sunday 13 July at the Usher Hall. 

EIF - Brian CoxAugust

Edinburgh International Festival [01 August to 24 August]

Founded in 1947, the Edinburgh International Festival is an unparalleled celebration of the performing arts and an annual meeting point for peoples of all nations. Committed to virtuosity and originality, the International Festival presents some of the finest performers and ensembles from the worlds of dance, opera, music and theatre for three weeks in August - making Scotland’s capital an unparalleled celebration of the performing arts and an annual meeting point for people of all nations. The 2025 programme will launch on 13 March with this year's theme being ’The Truth We Seek’ - offering contemporary reflections on the world alongside time-honoured tales: a place where fact meets faith and fiction. A number of shows have already been announced including the return to his homeland stage of Succession star Brian Cox, in a major new play exploring the global financial crash of 2008.

Edinburgh Festival Fringe [01 August to 25 August]

The Edinburgh Festival Fringe is one of the greatest celebrations of arts and culture on the planet. For three weeks in August, the city of Edinburgh welcomes an explosion of creative energy from around the globe. Artists and performers take to hundreds of stages all over the city to present shows for every taste. Venues can be anywhere, from existing theatres and concert halls to repurposed spaces like bars, parks, buses and shipping containers - while the Fringe street events bring colour, excitement and vibrancy to outdoor areas, free of charge. From big names in the world of entertainment to unknown artists looking to build their careers, the festival caters for everyone and includes all genres. The full 2025 programme will launch on 03 June.

Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo [01 August to 23 August]

Set against the backdrop of Edinburgh’s historic castle, The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo is one of the most special events in Edinburgh's calendar. Bringing together audiences from across the globe, the Tattoo celebrates the skills and talents of military bands and cultural performers from around the globe. There are few such immersive and moving festival moments, a fact to which any of the over 220,000 people who experience it live every year can attest – not to mention the further 100 million watching on television around the globe!  The sounds of the bands can be heard throughout the city, followed by the cheers of the audience, and the glorious projections that light up the Castle. 2025 represents the 75th anniversary of the Tattoo and the programme is already on sale, with this year's theme being 'The Heroes Who Made Us' - a show that will shine a light on the heroes across the Tattoo, military and wider society in Scotland who help better the lives of others through their efforts, to take audiences on a journey through our history.

Edinburgh Art Festival [07 August to 24 August]

Edinburgh Art Festival is the UK’s largest annual festival of visual art and was founded in 2004 through an ambitious partnership of galleries committed to ensuring that high quality presentations of visual art remained at the core of Edinburgh’s summer festival experience. The festival works with local and international partners to present an ambitious and meaningful programme of exhibitions, events and projects. Since its beginnings, the festival has featured exhibitions from artists at a pivotal point in their career, alongside the best emerging talent, major survey exhibitions of historic figures and a programme of new commissions. The full 2025 programme will launch on 29 May with various exhibitions and events announced in the intervening months - including a major retrospective of the 50-year career of internationally renowned landscape artist Andy Goldsworthy in the Royal Scottish Academy building.

Edinburgh International Book Festival [09 August to 24 August]

Since 1983, the Festival has welcomed hundreds of thousands of visitors to engage with the world’s greatest and emerging writers, thinkers, artists, and performers. Each year, they programme innovative events that capture the hearts and minds of audiences, both in Edinburgh and online. These take the form of on-stage conversations, workshops, creative masterclasses, think tanks, and more, all informed by a culture of open dialogue. Performance and interactive events have become prominent features of the Festival, complementing the more traditional interview-style conversations and readings, and contributing to the Book Festival’s reputation as a powerful forum for the public to exchange views with writers and experts on a wide range of issues. The 2025 programme will launch on 10 June, with the festival taking place in its new home at the Edinburgh Futures Institute, the landmark University of Edinburgh development on the site of the old Royal Infirmary on Lauriston Place.

Edinburgh International Film Festival [14 August to 20 August]

Established in 1947 as the International Festival of Documentary Films, the Edinburgh International Film Festival is renowned around the world for discovering and promoting the very best in international cinema - and for heralding and debating changes in global filmmaking. EIFF seeks to spotlight the most exciting and innovative new film talent, in a setting steeped in history. Intimate in its scale, ambitious in its scope, and fuelled by pure passion for cinema in all its manifestations, focusing on artistic quality and excellence, the festival explores new ideas in cinema, inviting local and international audiences to engage with a dynamic programme of features, documentaries, shorts and experimental cinema. The 2025 programme will launch in July, with the festival poised to announce details of the two major competitions inaugurated last year, namely The Sean Connery Prize for Feature Filmmaking Excellence and The Thelma Schoonmaker Prize for Short Filmmaking Excellence.

Mara Menzies - SISFAutumn/Winter

Scottish International Storytelling Festival [22 October to 01 November]

Great stories well told can evoke indelible images in the mind of the listener, offering visitors and locals a wonderful opportunity to enjoy the extraordinary tales, music and characters that bring both our contemporary and traditional culture to life. The Scottish International Storytelling Festival present world-class storytellers who celebrate the tradition, but also push the modern boundaries of storytelling as well, rooted in the past, resonating in the present. The Festival takes place in October each year, as the seasons change with long nights drawing families and friends around the hearth, inspired by the Scottish ceilidh tradition and its sense of togetherness – a community gathering full of tales, anecdotes, music, songs and ballads. The 2025 programme will launch in September.

Edinburgh's Hogmanay [29 December 2024 to 1 January 2025]

Hogmanay is the Scottish word for the last day of the year or New Year’s Eve and is generally regarded as the most important Scottish holiday. Edinburgh’s Hogmanay Festival dates back to 1993 and has evolved to become one of the greatest outdoor celebrations of New Year’s Eve in the world. What makes it so special is the fact that unlike other places that simply focus on the midnight moment, Edinburgh's Hogmanay is a four-day celebration that takes over the enture city. In any normal year the big events include a torchlight procession and other entertainment on 29 December, a massive outdoor street party, concerts, and fireworks on 31 December, and then a free live music trail across the city on 01 January. Programme launch date TBC.

For further information and news about each of the festivals throughout 2025, sign up to our newsletter.

Back to Inspiration