Entertainment
The reason why Glastonbury festival won’t be happening in 2026-Robert Oliver-Entertainment – Metro
It’s taking a much-needed break.
Glastonbury won’t be coming back in 2026 (Picture: WireImage)
Glastonbury 2024 is almost upon us, but organiser Emily Eavis has revealed why we shouldn’t be on the lookout for any 2026 dates.
This year, Dua Lipa, Coldplay, and SZA are set to headline, with the likes of Shania Twain, Avril Lavigne, LCD Soundsystem, and Little Simz also gracing the main stages at Worthy Farm.
However, it looks like the festival won’t be coming back in 2026, with Emily Eavis saying she’s ready for Glastonbury to take an elective break for the first time in six years.
Every once in a while, Glastonbury takes some time off – these are known as ‘fallow years’ – to allow the grass and farmland at Worthy Farm to get a break from the 200,000 people who visit the festival each year.
She told the BBC: ‘We are due a fallow year [at Glastonbury]. The fallow year is important because it gives the land a rest, and it gives the cows a chance to stay out for longer and reclaim their land.
‘I think it’s important, I think it gives everybody time to just switch off and the public as well. Then you kind of go away for a bit and it feels lovely when you come back. And I think it’s quite good not to be seen to be cashing in.’
Emily Eavis says they’re taking a break in 2026 (Picture: Getty)
Next year won’t be the first time Glastonbury has taken some time off, with the festival cancelled in 2020 and 2021 as a result of government lockdowns during the Covid pandemic.
The first time the festival took a break was in 1988 when the decision was taken to allow the grass on the festival’s home of Worthy Farm to grow again.
A second pause in proceedings came in 1991 when crowd trouble at Glastonbury in 1990 left organisers needing to update their safety and security measures.
Fallow years give the grass at Worthy Farm a break from the 200,000 visitors (Picture: Redferns)
The festival takes its toll on the farm each year (Picture: Richard Isaac/REX/Shutterstock)
The first fallow year to fall within a long-term planned schedule was in 1996, with then-organiser Michael Eavis (Emily’s dad) saying the festival would take a year off every five or six years.
The next break came in 2001, then another arrived in 2006. The plan was to take a break in 2011 but festival organisers thought it best to break in 2012 instead during the year of the London Olympics.
The last time Glastonbury took a planned break was in 2018, with the next two – 2020 and 2021 – forced on the organisers during the height of the pandemic.
Coldplay are back to headline Glastonbury once again (Picture: WireImage)
Dua Lipa will be making her Glastonbury debut on the Pyramid Stage (Picture: Getty)
A statement in 2018 said: ‘We will be taking our next fallow year in 2018, in order to give the farm, the village, and the festival team the traditional year off. There are no plans to hold an event at another location in 2018.’
There were rumours in 2017 that Glastonbury might well be moved to a new location in the near future, with plans for a new name even teased by Emily Eavis, but those plans were put on hold in 2019.
Last year, the festival was headlined by Arctic Monkeys (for a second time), Guns n Roses, and Sir Elton John – nearly eight million people tuned in to see Sir Elton’s legendary Sunday afternoon set.
Watch Glastonbury coverage across the BBC from June 26.
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