8 of the best UK summer festivals for families

This article was produced by National Geographic Traveller (UK).

Music festivals are doing more than ever to cater to all interests and ages. Younger audiences are often won over purely by the fact that attendance typically involves camping, glamping or pitching up in a caravan — an opportunity to sleep out in the wild. But the UK’s best festivals also provide an endless roster of activities, workshops and experiences to help families bond and create lasting memories. From chilled countryside escapes to adrenaline-sparking coastal adventures. Here are the golden tickets for summer 2025.

1. Camp Bestival

Best for: big music acts
Set in the grounds of Lulworth Castle, Dorset’s award-winning festival always has a solid line-up, from Tom Jones to the Sugababes and Mr Tumble. Away from the main stages, there’s the world’s biggest bouncy castle, mud kitchens and activities such as kids’ talent shows, bucket-hat sewing camps and sensory gardens. At the Orchestra of Objects, children can even invent their own musical instruments from junk. 31 July to 3 August. From £733 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: Dressing down for the world’s largest pyjama party on the Saturday evening.

2. Green Man

Best for: connecting with nature
Backdropped by Bannau Brycheiniog (the Brecon Beacons National Park), the campsite at Green Man opens three days before the action starts, giving families the opportunity to enjoy a week-long break in rural Wales. After evenings spent dancing to the likes of Brit Award winners Wet Leg and dance legends Underworld, welcome each new day with a family sunrise yoga session before wandering over to Einstein’s Garden for scientific installations, art and wildlife walks. Older kids can try their hand at film-making, crafting and mastering circus skills in the ‘Somewhere’ zone. 14 to 17 August. From £650 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: The closing fireworks display and ritual burning of the Green Man sculpture to symbolise rebirth in the natural world.

The Family Field sign stands at the Wilderness Festival.

At the Wilderness Festival in Oxfordshire, the Family Field is full of games, theatre and workshops for all ages.

Photograph by Sarah Louise Bennett

3. Wilderness Festival

Best for: sparking creativity
Set within the 5,000-acre Cornbury Park in Oxfordshire, Wilderness Festival has a suitably retro music line-up for parents this year, including Basement Jaxx, Supergrass and Orbital. There’s also a dedicated Family Field packed with activities to spark the imagination and inspire creativity. Younger ravers can attend the regular storytelling sessions or ‘Treemendously Wild’ craft workshop to build masterpieces out of natural materials; for older kids, there are slime-making and circus workshops, comic-drawing sessions and poetry classes, plus woodland theatre. And when parents want to attend a gig solo or visit the Lakeside Spa & Sauna, there’s a popular nanny service for the little ones. 31 July-3 August; From £610 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: Hands-on radio and podcasting tutorials with experienced producers for budding broadcasters.

4. Camp Kindling

Best for: bonding adventures
Exclusively for families, this Kent favourite prides itself on being more like a summer camp than a festival. Over 100 adventurous activities are on offer throughout the ancient woodland setting. For a quieter moment away from the zorbing, raft-building and beekeeping, grown-ups can take advantage of on-site childcare and nip to the adults-only wellness sanctuary. 15 to 18 August. From £520 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: Join a patrol — the Kindling version of a house at school — and work with new friends to compete for the Kindling Cup.

People crowd around an outdoor stage at Deer Shed music festival near Ripon in North Yorkshire

At Deer Shed music festival, there’s no designated kids’ area — the whole event, dedicated to discovery and expanding younger children’s minds, is accessible.

Photograph by James Drury

5. Deer Shed

Best for: inspiring young minds
Sheep are a regular sight on the landscaped fields of Deer Shed — set on part of a working farm close to Ripon in North Yorkshire. There’s no designated kids’ area — the whole event, dedicated to discovery and expanding younger children’s minds, is accessible. Children can see where imagination leads through storytelling workshops and learn about creepy-crawlies through song in The Bug Hotel. Kae Tempest is headlining on Saturday this year; for the smallest ravers, there’s the blackout tent hosting a toddler ‘nightclub’. 25 to 28 July. From £534 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: DJing classes, to help aspiring kids on their journey towards festival headlining.

6. Wildhood Festival

Best for: brave Celtic warriors
‘Celebrating Scotland’ is the theme of this three-day event in the grounds of Perthshire’s Tullibole Castle. Aimed primarily at children aged 12 and under, Wildhood plays on local folklore and Scottish traditions with tartan workshops, a woodland haggis hunt, even searching for Nessie in the castle moat. Local bands are complemented by pipers, and street food stalls serve up Caledonian classics. 6 to 8 June. From £509 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: Competing in a junior version of the Highland Games.

Fried food at Cornwall’s Rock Oyster festival

Food is the main attraction at Cornwall’s Rock Oyster Festival.

Photograph by the Rock Oyster Festival, Caitlin Mogridge

7. Rock Oyster Festival

Best for: water babies
Making the most of its Cornish coastal location, just a rock’s throw from Padstow, Rock Oyster offers an armada of water-based activities, from surfing lessons to a pirate school. This year’s impressive musical line-up includes Rag’n’Bone Man and UB40. Food plays a major role here, too, with celebrity chef masterclasses and a cookery school for kids. 24-27 July. From £418 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: A model-making workshop with Aardman, the creative brains behind Wallace and Gromit

8. Deva Fest

Best for: funfair fans
Taking its title from the Roman name for nearby Chester, this festival is set in fields overlooked by Cholmondeley Castle. It gives older children a glimpse of life 2,000 years ago with archery, axe-throwing and bushcraft sessions. Younger revellers will enjoy the games and shows led by a team from Chester Zoo, covering topics such as the science behind animal poo. Deva Fest is friendly on the wallet, too, with free fairground rides hoovering up the daylight hours, before Happy Mondays and Gloria Gaynor take to the main stage. 8 to 10 August. From £431 for a family of four camping.

Highlight: The Grand Cavalcade troupe of performers leading explosive science experiments, madcap storytelling and interactive workshops. 

Published in the June 2025 issue of National Geographic Traveller (UK).

To subscribe to National Geographic Traveller (UK) magazine click here. (Available in select countries only).

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