Tourism London has published a fresh slate of special events running from Friday, March 20 through Sunday, June 21, 2026, with concerts, theatre, food festivals and family days spread across London, Ontario’s parks, halls and clubs. The listings, posted on the city’s tourism website, show 38 special events across the late‑March to June window. The first weekend starts with St. Patrick’s Week at Beer Kitchen in the 100 Kellogg Lane complex on March 20, then ramps up on March 27 and 28. March closes with three very different tickets on Saturday, March 28: Phone: The Musical Series at Hyland Cinema, Simple Reflections Art & Culture Showcase at Museum London, and the Boogie T “Odyssey” Tour at London Music Hall. Each has its own start time and admission details on its event page.

What’s on in london this march

The calendar’s March run opens with St. Patrick’s Week at Beer Kitchen on March 20, followed by a pair of Friday events on March 27. Those are Grease – a LIT Experience at the Portuguese Club of London and Big Changes Fest at Palasad Socialbowl. Both March 27 shows lean into performance and nightlife, while March 28 pushes into arts and music. The Hyland Cinema entry is tied to a live musical series, Museum London hosts an all‑ages cultural showcase, and the Music Hall bills a touring electronic act. Event pages for each listing sit on the same portal. The full special events list is live on the Tourism London site under Special Events, with date filters, categories and a submission form for organisers. See the current slate on the official page at Special Events.

April events and venues

April starts outdoors with the Springbank Sprint on Saturday, April 4 at Springbank Park, a long‑running draw for local runners and walkers along the Thames River paths. From there, programming shifts indoors for comedy and concerts. On Friday, April 10, the Palace Theatre hosts The Great Canadian Comedy Caravan Tour, a benefit for Make‑A‑Wish Canada. Two days later, on Sunday, April 12, Hyland Cinema screens Somewhere Along The Way alongside a concert performance. Also on April 12, Museum London schedules Magisterra Sensory Concerts: Songs My Mother Taught Me, designed to be accessible for a range of audiences. The week rounds out with Stomp at Canada Life Place on Thursday, April 16, known for percussion and choreography using everyday objects. The month’s final entry on this page is the Spring Potters Market, running April 18–19 at the Thames Valley District School Board Building. The market typically draws ceramic artists and buyers for a weekend of sales and demonstrations.

What’s coming in may and june

The events board picks up again Saturday, May 9 with Driven London at the J‑AAR Expo Centre, promoted as a modified car showcase with club displays and exhibitors. Specific entry times and ticket tiers are set on each organiser’s page. Victoria Park returns to the schedule over the long weekend, with London Poutine Feast running Thursday, May 21 through Sunday, May 24. It’s a traveling food‑truck festival with multiple vendors and live entertainment. details and hours are listed on the Poutine Feast event page. The same weekend brings Clue – Live on Stage to Canada Life Place on May 22–23, a stage adaptation based on the board game and film. It sits in the middle of a busy fortnight for downtown theatres and arenas. June opens with the Silverwoods Park Festival Antique & Classic Car Show on Saturday, June 6 at Vauxhall Park. It’s billed as a day for vintage vehicles, local clubs and families who want to walk the grounds and talk to owners. The final weekend on this listing is June 19–21 for the London Children’s Festival at Victoria Park. Expect rides, activities and stage shows programmed for kids, with vendors and services clustered around the park’s main paths.

Where things are happening

The venues in this run trace a simple map of the city’s cultural circuit. 100 Kellogg Lane anchors the east side as a redeveloped industrial complex with dining and event spaces. Downtown, Victoria Park and Canada Life Place take care of large‑format outdoor and arena programming. Smaller rooms fill in the rest. Hyland Cinema handles film and hybrid music‑film nights. London Music Hall books touring acts on Richmond Street. Museum London’s galleries serve as a host for concerts and multi‑disciplinary showcases. Neighbourhood destinations feature too. Palasad Socialbowl folds performance into bowling and arcade nights. The Portuguese Club of London often rents its hall for touring productions, dinners and dances that rely on a built‑in audience.

How to get details and tickets

Individual event pages on the Tourism London portal include times, age restrictions, accessibility notes and ticket links. Because organisers submit and update their own listings, details can change close to show day. If you’re planning to head to Victoria Park or Springbank Park, double‑check weather contingencies on the day and bring a backup plan for rain. For indoor halls, capacity limits and age rules apply, and some late‑night events may be 19‑plus. The Special Events page lists 38 entries across three pages. That suggests more could be added as spring progresses, and some shows may sell out quickly. Start with the master listing at Tourism London and work from there.

How london’s listings stack up

Regional calendars show similar momentum heading into 2026. In the Greater Toronto Area, the conservation authority has already mapped its festival season, as we reported in TRCA 2026 events. These guides help locals plan weekends and short trips. Overseas, other cities publish practical weekend round‑ups for residents. Auckland’s metro guide, for example, bundles parades, theatre and sport into a single digest, as seen in the Auckland weekend guide. London’s page performs the same function here. Tourism calendars also feed into spending at nearby restaurants and shops. When Victoria Park hosts a food festival or a touring show fills Canada Life Place, foot traffic flows along Richmond and Dundas before and after gates open. If you run an event, the portal includes a submission tool with fields for dates, categories, images and venue. Free listings increase visibility and help organisers avoid duplicated efforts across social media and posters. Transport and parking vary by venue. 100 Kellogg Lane has on‑site parking, while downtown trips work best if you leave extra time for garages, buses or rideshares on weekend nights when multiple shows start within the same hour. The first event on this slate lands Friday, March 20, 2026 at 100 Kellogg Lane. After that, March 27–28 stack up with theatre, concerts and markets, then the schedule runs most weekends through June 21. Listings are updated as organisers confirm details.