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Bristol Light Festival returns for February half-term

An illuminated curved light bar sits on a wet city street at night.

Bristol Light Festival is set to return to Central Bristol from Thursday 18 February to Saturday 27 February 2027, bringing the city centre event back across the final weekend of February half-term.

The confirmed listing from Visit Bristol gives the venue as Central Bristol and the dates as a 10-day run. Start times, end times, ticketing details and any booking requirements have not yet been published in the source information, so visitors should treat those details as still to be confirmed.

Confirmed dates and city centre location

Detail Confirmed information
Event Bristol Light Festival
Location Central Bristol
Dates Thursday 18 February to Saturday 27 February 2027
Time Not yet listed
Price Not yet listed
Booking details Not yet listed

The festival is billed as returning to Bristol in February, once again overlapping with the final weekend of the February half-term period. That timing is likely to make the dates useful for families, visitors and city centre workers planning ahead, although the source has not specified a target audience.

Because the listed venue is Central Bristol rather than a single named building or address, readers should expect the final event information to define the exact locations or route more clearly closer to the date.

What has been announced so far

Visit Bristol’s event listing confirms the Bristol Light Festival title, its festival format, the Central Bristol setting and the 18-27 February 2027 run. It also describes the event as returning, which places it as part of Bristol’s recurring cultural calendar rather than a one-off listing.

No programme highlights, individual installations, artists, maps or daily schedules are included in the available source text. That matters for planning: anyone deciding whether to make a special trip should wait for the full programme before choosing a day or route.

The confirmed dates still give residents and visitors a useful early marker. A late-February city centre event can affect evening plans, family half-term schedules and weekend visits, especially when the final weekend of half-term falls within the festival period.

Planning notes before more details are released

The most useful practical point for now is the date window. The festival is due to run for 10 calendar days, from a Thursday through to the following Saturday, giving visitors more than one weekend period to consider.

Times have not been listed, so it is too early to say when installations will open, how late the event will run or whether every part of the programme will operate on the same schedule. Price information is also absent from the source, meaning no claim can yet be made about free entry, ticketed elements or booking requirements.

The venue entry simply says Central Bristol. That gives a broad area but not a precise meeting point, street list or accessibility route. Visitors who need step-free access information, quieter periods or specific transport guidance should wait for the published event map and visitor details before making firm arrangements.

Who should keep the dates free

The confirmed half-term overlap makes the Bristol Light Festival relevant for families looking ahead to the February school break, as well as people planning a city centre evening during winter. It may also be useful for visitors comparing Bristol weekend dates, since the festival runs across the final weekend of February half-term.

For now, the safest planning approach is to hold the date range rather than a specific arrival time. The known details are strong enough to mark the calendar, but not enough to settle travel, parking, accessibility or booking decisions.

Further practical details to look for when the full listing is updated include opening times, exact city centre locations, any ticket or booking requirements, programme highlights and visitor guidance for the 18-27 February 2027 festival run.

Source: Visit Bristol Events

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Priya Harrington

Priya Harrington

Author

Priya Harrington covers Ealing with a focus on public services, neighbourhood planning, transport changes and community safety. She has worked across west London local newsrooms, checking official records, meeting papers and resident accounts before publication. Her reporting aims to explain municipal decisions clearly, highlight practical impacts for households and keep local readers informed with accurate, public-interest updates

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