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Every month on this island, something worth showing up for. Here's your year-round guide to Barbados' best recurring festivals.

Barbados doesn't have a festival season. It has a festival year.

From the horse racing in March to Crop Over in August to the Food and Rum Festival in November, the island gives you a reason to visit in every month. And the best events aren't just spectacles you watch — they're the kind of thing you find yourself telling stories about long after you're home.

Below is the complete annual calendar. Use it to plan your trip around the moments that matter to you, or let us build an itinerary that puts you right in the middle of one.

Filtering by: “Culture & Heritage”
Feb
14
to Feb 21

Holetown Festival

If you're building a February trip around the Holetown Festival, base yourself in St. James — ideally within walking distance of Holetown itself. The festival runs across a full week and most events are free, so you can structure your days around beach time and dip into events as the week builds.

The opening Saturday sets the tone: the parade kicks off mid-afternoon, followed by the National Opening Ceremony on the street, past performers have included Hypasounds, Mikey Mercer, and Lil Rick, and the evening typically runs late. Sunday morning brings the Bus Tour of Historic Holetown, departing from Holetown Library, a good way to get your bearings on the settlement history before the week gets livelier. The George Ullyett Memorial Street Parade runs on the Saturday (vintage cars, military groups, local dance groups), and the Holetown Festival 5K Walk & Run is a good anchor for the active end of the week. The Stiltman, Mother Sally, and the tuk band are out most days ,if you have children, this is the kind of Barbados they'll remember.

The Alfred Pragnell Memorial Talks happen mid-week and are worth attending if history interests you, they're short, free, and well-attended by locals. The evening concerts build across the week and the Saturday night street party at the Holetown Monument tends to be the high point.

The west coast in February is warm, uncrowded relative to the Christmas peak, and at its most beautiful. A Holetown Festival trip is one of the best low-key ways to experience the island.

Adventure Barbados add-ons

  • St. James villa or boutique hotel within walking distance of Holetown

  • Private Barbados history and heritage guided tour timed around the festival's historical themes

  • Book the Holetown Bus Tour through the Festival Information Booth, Adventure Barbados can arrange tickets in advance

  • Dinner reservation at a west coast restaurant on the festival's opening weekend

  • Sandy Lane spa afternoon as a mid-week reset

  • Plantation house visit and afternoon tea in the north of the island

Practical details

Where: Holetown, St. James, West Coast

When: Mid-February, one week (Saturday to Sunday)

Cost: Most events free (Bus Tour and some ticketed concerts have a small charge)

Best for: Culture, community, families, first-time visitors

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