Belfast councillors at City Hall have agreed £150,000 for the festival
Belfast Culture Night has been confirmed again for 2026, and will be held on Friday September 18, in line with other Culture Night events across the island of Ireland.
The event will continue to build on the more low-key, but still highly successful model introduced last year by Belfast City Council.
This week, at a committee meeting at City Hall, councillors agreed to fund £150,000 for Culture Night 2026, the same as last year, through a procurement process including an option to extend the contract to cover delivery of Culture Night 2027. The decision will go to the full council meeting next month for ratification, where it is expected to pass.
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At the February meeting of the council’s City Growth and Regeneration Committee, officers presented findings of last year’s event, provided by the arts and heritage evaluators and researchers Thrive.
Culture Night returned to Belfast in September 2025 following a six-year absence precipitated by the coronavirus crisis, and the host organisation, the Cathedral Quarter Trust, folding operations. The new Culture Night aimed not to programme street-based events, and instead concentrated on venue-based events across a wider space in the city, with more community involvement.
It also aimed to move away from street drinking and concentrations of crowds, and required organisations to prove they were paying artists.
A council report for this month’s committee states: “The 2025 event was delivered as a venue-led, city-wide programme, prioritising free, accessible and family-friendly activity and operating through a receiving house model. As a pilot to support a new approach to Culture Night a number of artists, cultural organisations and venues were financially supported to participate, and no street-based programming or road closures were included.”
The Thrive evaluation concluded that the pilot for a new approach to Culture Night 2025 was a success, generating positive audience experiences, “sector goodwill” and an estimated attendance of 50,000 people. A total of 158 events were delivered by 182 participating organisations, venues and artists.
The committee report states: “Audiences valued the safe, welcoming and family-friendly atmosphere, while participants reported high levels of satisfaction and willingness to take part again. Areas identified for further development included improved signage and navigation between sites, earlier engagement with the cultural sector, including artists, venues and organisations, and continued strengthening of activity across all areas of the city beyond the city centre and Cathedral Quarter.”
Thrive showed the average spend per attendee who spent money was £33.33, while the estimated total economic impact of approximately a minimum £1.67 million for the city. Audiences were younger and more diverse than typical arts audiences in Belfast.
14 percent of attendees lived in the most deprived areas of Northern Ireland, 20 percent of respondents identified as disabled, including people with invisible and neurodivergent conditions, and 14 percent of respondents identified as LGBTQ+.
73 percent of participants delivering events were taking part in Culture Night for the first time. 75 percent of events were suitable for all ages, reinforcing the family-friendly focus. Music was the most represented artform, accounting for 51 percent of events.
Events took place across all parts of the city, including North, South, East and West Belfast. 43 percent of events were located in Cathedral Quarter and 28 percent in the city centre. Venues outside the city centre experienced lower footfall, which the report concludes “reflected the event’s first year back in a new format, and need to build on a city-wide offer.”
86 percent of audiences rated their overall experience as good or very good. 95 percent of attendees spent two or more hours at Culture Night, with 33 percent spending five or more hours. 44 percent of audiences reported visiting venues or places they had not previously visited.
£49,482 was distributed to support artists and venues. 48 percent of events submitted for the programme requested financial support to participate. 93 percent of participants stated they would like to take part again in future Culture Nights.
No incidents were recorded by the council or PSNI that were directly linked to Culture Night 2025.
Established in 2009, Culture Night Belfast was a large-scale and free cultural event taking place in the Cathedral Quarter, based on the Temple Bar Cultural Trust Dublin event.
Audiences grew to an attendance of over 100,000 for the 2019 event held across two days in September 2019. The budget for Culture Night ranged from £240k in 2016 to over £328k in 2019, with around £12K coming from the council in its last four years.
COVID resulted in the suspension of the event in September 2020, with a digital version staged instead. That year the Cathedral Quarter Trust and Belfast City Council co-commissioned a review which said “the existing model for Culture Night has become problematic.”
The review stated the audience for the event has grown exponentially whilst the volume and quality in the programme had not, and stated the idea that artists “could, would or should give their time for free is no longer a viable delivery model.” It said the audience’s relationship with the event has changed so much that family audiences “felt pushed out and unsafe.”
In 2022 organisers said that the event had “become too big and unwieldy” and the original intention of providing a platform for artistic and cultural communities to connect with a much wider audience “had been lost.”
Culture Night ran in Belfast in 2021, but did not return. In 2023 the Cathedral Quarter Trust announced it would cease day-to-day operations after Stormont funding was ended. Financial pressures facing Stormont’s Department for Communities were reportedly behind the decision.
In the Republic of Ireland Culture Night is largely led by local authorities in each area, with investments ranging from approximately €30k in Cork to over €190k in Dublin. Unlike the Culture Night Belfast model, which was largely about converting the streets of the Cathedral Quarter into a pop-up venue with road closures and “on-street” programming, Culture Night Dublin does not involve road closures and is spread across the whole city.
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