Bons Sons 2026 has its lineup and tickets out — a whole Portuguese village turns 20-year festival from 6 to 9 August
Bons Sons 2026 lineup, dates and tickets: 40+ Portuguese music acts across 11 stages in the village of Cem Soldos, Tomar. Full pass €60, day tickets €35.
There are festivals held in venues, and then there’s Bons Sons, where the venue is an entire village. From 6 to 9 August, Cem Soldos, near Tomar in central Portugal, once again opens its streets, backyards and old threshing floors for the festival’s 13th edition — and this one is special: the project turns 20, with a finished lineup of more than 40 Portuguese music acts and tickets already on sale.
The maths will make anyone used to big-festival prices smile: the four-day general pass costs €60 — camping included — rising to €70 once the current phase sells out; day tickets are €35. In all there will be over 50 performances, spanning concerts, shows and DJ sets across 11 stages. Official ticketing is on the festival’s website.
How much are Bons Sons 2026 tickets?
The general pass is €60 in the current phase (€70 later) and day tickets cost €35, with paid entry from age 12 — numbers that make Bons Sons one of the most affordable festivals of the Portuguese summer. This edition’s novelty is the Rosa Ramalho stage, named after the celebrated folk sculptor: it takes concerts out to old threshing floors and vegetable gardens on the village edge, with limited capacity and advance sign-up.
The programming favours collective projects and returning artists from the festival’s history — the first announced names included A Sul, Cacique’97, Crua, Lavoisier, Líquen, Mães Solteiras, Miss Universo, MXGPU, Romeu Bairos and Seara — alongside partnerships with the Música Portuguesa a Gostar Dela Própria archive, the Materiais Diversos performing-arts festival, the Curtas em Flagrante short-film showcase and debates run by the Gerador platform. Music, cinema, performance and conversation, all at village scale.
August in Portugal is crowded with options — from Paredes de Coura, whose day-by-day lineup is out, to the Feira de São Mateus in Viseu — but nothing else looks like this: in Cem Soldos, the hosts are the villagers themselves. Twenty years on, the motto hasn’t changed — come live the village.
Image: Bons Sons