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Yungblud’s Bludfest 2026: tickets, air travel and is it worth it?

Stela Wade
Written by Stela Wade
Editor-in-Chief at thinkmoney
26th Feb 2026
2 minute read

Bludfest is heading abroad for the first time. Yungblud has confirmed that the 2026 festival will take place on 27 June at Park 360 in Hradec Králové, about 100km east of Prague. 

Yungblud created Bludfest to keep live music affordable and accessible, after seeing fans priced out of big shows. The decision to move to Prague has sparked some pushback, with fans in the UK worried they’ll be priced out due to airfare costs.  

Below is your full guide with ticket prices, camping costs, travel tips, and some easy budgeting tips to keep costs low.  

Where and when is Bludfest 2026? 

  • Date: 27 June 2026 

  • Location: Park 360, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic (near Prague)  

  • Format: One‑day festival with optional camping before and after.  

Bludfest line-up 2026:

The 2026 line-up includes: 

  • Yungblud 

  • Biffy Clyro 

  • Primal Scream 

  • Palaye Royale 

  • Pale Waves 

  • Destroy Lonely 

  • Leap 

  • Jesse Jo Stark 

  • Bambie Thug 

  • Nieve Ella 

  • Pam Rabbit  

Ticket info 

Pre-sale tickets are on sale today, but the registration for the pre-sale has now closed. General tickets go on sale tomorrow (27th February).  

When tickets go on sale 

  • Pre-sale: 26 February 

  • General sale: 27 February at 10am GMT / 11am CET 

  • Tickets are sold at: bludfest.com/tickets 

Ticket prices  

Ticket prices vary, but you can expect to pay:  

  • From EUR 79 (roughly £68) to EUR 108 (roughly £94) for a standard ticket which allows full festival access on June 27 during standard opening hours  

  • EUR 145 (roughly £146) for a COMFY+ ticket which comes with 24 hour access, fast track access, backstage zones, luxury toilets and the opportunity to book accommodation in the premium glamping section which also comes with platinum parking.  

  • Accessible tickets start from EUR 79 (around £68), and you’ll need to contact ticketing to purchase these, they’re not available via the site.  

Camping costs 

The festival offers standard camping and glamping.  

  • Standard camping: Costs EUR 20 (around £17) per person, and you have to bring your own tent; facilities include toilets, showers, luggage storage, power sockets, and safety deposit boxes.  

  • Glamping: Glamping costs EUR 83 (around £72) to EUR 458 (around £400) and includes all types of bougie options; there’s a tent hotel for two where the tent’s set up for you, or the bougier wood & canvas tent for two with a wooden platform (EUR 104), plus a few premium options starting from around EUR 400 but some come with their own private bathroom facilities!  

The standard camping option is obviously the cheapest, but many of the glamping options are based on two people sharing (or more sometimes), so can work out better value for money.  

How to get there from the UK 

Flying is probably going to be your best bet, but prices will be on the higher end. We’ve already had a sneak peak, and Prague is looking spenny on the days around the festival.    

Flying 

Here are your options at the time of writing:  

  • Fly to Prague (Václav Havel Airport) - A return ticket from London where you set off on the Friday before the Bludfest festival and come back on Sunday will set you back around £170 for a direct flight for the cheapest option, but you need to catch a 6:50am flight on Sunday morning which might only work if you’re renting a car and willing to go for an early start; a more reasonable flight time of 10:40am currently ups the price to £234.  

  • Fly to Vienna – A return ticket from London where you set off on Friday and come back Sunday will set you back around £160 if you opt for Ryanair’s afternoon flight on Sunday (might be a good idea as you’ll need to transfer to Vienna, though the Bludest site claims there’s a direct train from nearby Pardubice to Vienna, making it easy to cross borders).  

The Bludfest website suggests you could try flying to Brno as well, but we didn’t find any options between Friday to Sunday, so this one might only be an option if you’re looking for a longer trip as flights don’t seem to happen on a daily basis.  

If it’s in the budget, we’d suggest exploring setting off from Prague on Monday, easyjet and Ryanair options will set you back around £150 for a return, the transfer will be less stressful, and you get a day to explore Prague as well. This will work out more expensive overall, as you’ll need to account for accommodation and activities in Prague, but can be a good mini-holiday rather than just a festival trip.  

Train or bus options from Prague and Vienna  

From Prague, there’s a direct train connection from Prague Main Train Station which will take you to the festival. When you land in Prague, take the bus from the airport which will transfer you to the train station.  

From Vienna, there are trains running directly to Pardubice where you’ll need to transfer to Hradec Králové. Train company options include Regiojet and Czech Railways.  

Shuttle buses 

A special shuttle will run between Hradec city centre and Park 360 on festival days, with the exact timetable published closer to the time.  

Will there be a Bludfest festival in the UK in 2026?

This year's festival is taking place in the Czech Republic, and there won't be a separate Bludfest event in the UK in 2026. The festival took place in Milton Keynes for two years in a row, and was seen as an affordable day out for festival goers.

Yungblud had previously made comments about taking the festival abroad. Fans are split over the decision, with some showing support while others voicing they feel they've been priced out.

So how much should you budget for Bludfest 2026?  

You would be looking at around EUR 100 (around £85) for the cheapest ticket and camping option, and you’ll then need to budget for flights too which will cost you around £170 if you come back on Sunday. So, flights, tickets, and camping will set you back around £250.  

Bear in mind, with the cheapest camping option, you’ll probably need to pick up a tent when you get to the Czech Republic because the flights we’ve looked up don’t include luggage options.  

Instead, it might be worth sharing a pre-set up tent with a friend (EUR 83 or roughly £72) so you don’t need to worry about the logistics of bringing one. That’ll set you back around £36 each, so the total will be around £270 each instead. 

That’s before we take into account train and bus tickets, or spending money at the actual festival.  

Is the Bludfest festival 2026 good value for money if you’re from the UK? 

The festival itself works out pretty cheap if you’re based in or around the Czech Republic. You can camp and see the show for £85 if you’re willing to bring your own tent, or around £100 if you go for the bougier option and share with a friend.  

The issue is the travel there which will set you back around £170 just in flights from the UK. At that point, if the festival is the only reason you’re flying there, you’d be looking at a price of at least £250 for what is essentially a one-day festival, before we tote up discretionary spending and transfers (options include car rentals, train and bus transfers). Is that worth it? It depends on how much you value the line-up.  

But, by contrast, at Reading and Leeds this year, you’re looking at around £325 for four days of music and camping, versus £250 for one day of music at Bludfest. Bludfest might work out better value for money if you’re willing to combine it with a mini trip to Prague to take the sting out of the airfare a little.  

Stela Wade
Written by Stela Wade

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