Woodford Folk Festival public tickets on sale
Community, connection and curiosity continue to drive demand for Queensland’s iconic festival
Public tickets for the 2026 Woodford Folk Festival are officially on sale, with organisers expecting another strong year for the iconic Queensland event.
Returning from December 27 to January 1, the festival will mark its 39th year overall and 32nd at Woodfordia.
Woodfordia Managing Director and Co-Founder Amanda Jackes said early demand had already surged, with member presales recording a 15 per cent increase compared to previous years.
“We have observed over the years that people are seeking meaningful connections, even more so nowadays, with our society becoming so disconnected in human interactions,” Amanda said.
“There’s a strong appetite for gathering together in ways that feel human, grounded and hopeful, and I think Woodford sits very naturally in that space.”
The announcement comes during a difficult period for Australia’s live music and festival industry, with several festivals and venues across the country struggling or closing in recent years. However, Amanda believes Woodford’s long-standing community culture continues to set it apart.
“People don’t just attend Woodford – they participate in it, contribute to it, and often feel a sense of stewardship toward it. We call it a festival by the people, for the people,” she said.
More than just a music festival
While the 2026 program and artist lineup will not be announced until mid-October, organisers say many festival-goers secure tickets early because they trust the broader Woodford experience itself.
“Woodford has always been a festival where people trust the broader experience as much as any individual artist announcement,” Amanda explained.
“Sometimes I think Woodford should be called a holiday rather than a festival.”
Set in a hidden valley surrounded by SEQ rainforest trees, Woodfordia transforms into a temporary village during the six-day event, complete with a swimming lake and 27 venues hosting music, performances, workshops and cultural experiences from around the world.
“If you see it through a traveller’s eyes, it is a place of discovery and magic. It is unique,” Amanda said.
“There’s something very powerful about entering a space where thousands of people gather not around outrage or consumption, but around curiosity, participation and joy.”
The festival has also become a generational tradition for many Queensland families.
“Children who once came holding their parents’ hands are now bringing their own families. That continuity creates a very rare kind of cultural memory,” she said.
Amanda said Woodford continues to offer something increasingly difficult to find elsewhere.
“In a time when so much of life feels transactional or divided, Woodford remains one of the rare places where people gather to imagine culture, community, and the future together,” she reflected.
“The currency that is exchanged throughout the temporary village of Woodford is goodwill and kindness.”
Public tickets for the 2026 Woodford Folk Festival go on sale at 9am on Friday, May 29. More information is available here or at https://woodfordfolkfestival.c...