The United Kingdom has one of the world's richest literary festival landscapes. On any given weekend between May and November, there is almost certainly a major celebration of books and ideas taking place somewhere on these islands. But not all festivals are equal, and the choice of where to invest your time — and, in some cases, your travel budget — matters.
This guide is our honest, detailed comparison of the four UK literary festivals that matter most in 2026: the London Literature Festival, Hay Festival, Edinburgh International Book Festival, and Cheltenham Literature Festival. We are not impartial — this guide is published by the London Literature Festival — but we have been scrupulously fair, because the best argument for attending our festival is an honest account of what makes each of them great.
The Four Festivals — At a Glance
The London Literature Festival is the UK's longest-running annual literary festival, now in its 19th edition. Based permanently at the Southbank Centre — the UK's largest arts centre — it offers 10 days of author talks, poetry, spoken word, masterclasses, children's events, and a major literary fair, with over 40 events completely free to attend.
In 2026, the festival is guest curated by Dua Lipa (Service95 Book Club), who programmes the opening weekend of 24–25 October at the Royal Festival Hall. The festival also coincides with the Southbank Centre's 75th anniversary and the UK National Year of Reading — making this the most culturally significant edition in the festival's history.
What distinguishes the London Literature Festival from all rivals is its commitment to accessibility (free events, central London venue, excellent transport links) and its willingness to break down the walls between literary culture and popular culture — most visibly through its Guest Curator model, which has brought rapper Ghetts (2024) and now Dua Lipa (2026) into the heart of the programme.
- 40+ completely free events
- Unrivalled London location + transport
- Cross-disciplinary Guest Curator model
- National Poetry Library on-site (free)
- Urban, diverse, international audience
- 2026 celebrity curation (Dua Lipa) = highest-profile edition yet
- Smaller in scale than Hay or Edinburgh
- Opening weekend events can sell out fast
- London accommodation can be expensive
Bill Clinton called it "the Woodstock of the mind." The Hay Festival is the UK's largest literary festival by attendance, drawing around 250,000 visitors across 10 days to the small Welsh market town of Hay-on-Wye each May and June. Its scale is extraordinary: 600+ events across 25 venues, from a 1,200-seat main stage to intimate conversation tents.
The programming range is vast — from political memoir to children's illustration, from climate science to stand-up comedy. The Hay headliner list over the decades reads like a who's who of global intellectual life. The rural setting, summer timing, and festival atmosphere create a particular magic that is genuinely unlike anything else in the UK.
- Unrivalled scale — 600+ events
- Extraordinary rural festival atmosphere
- Children's programme is superb
- The town itself is a bookshop destination
- Summer timing — better weather
- Remote location — requires travel/accommodation
- Most events are ticketed; fewer free options
- Can feel overwhelming in scale
- May/June — different season to LLF
The Edinburgh International Book Festival is the world's largest book festival — a 17-day event each August in Edinburgh's Georgian New Town. It benefits enormously from running simultaneously with the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, creating an unmatched atmosphere of intellectual and creative ferment across the entire city.
The international reach of the Book Festival is exceptional — it regularly brings authors who rarely appear elsewhere in the UK, particularly from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Its commitment to translating and platforming world literature in English gives it a breadth that no other UK festival matches.
- World's largest book festival
- Extraordinary international author selection
- Edinburgh Fringe context is unrivalled
- Strong on translated world literature
- Requires Edinburgh travel (from London: 4–5hrs)
- August accommodation very expensive (Fringe pricing)
- Different season to LLF — no clash
The Cheltenham Literature Festival is the UK's oldest, founded in 1949 in the Regency town of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire. Running in October — the same window as the London Literature Festival — it maintains a reputation for excellent traditional literary programming in beautiful surroundings.
Cheltenham's audience is typically older, more conservative in literary taste, and predominantly white British — which is both a strength (a reliable, committed audience) and a limitation (a less diverse programme than London). Its Regency town centre and Imperial Gardens setting is genuinely beautiful; the festival tents and venues feel connected to a specific, cherished English literary tradition.
- Beautiful Regency town setting
- Reliable, high-quality traditional programming
- Strong children's programme
- Shorter travel from London (2hrs by train)
- Less diverse than London programme
- Fewer free events than LLF
- Same October window as LLF — choose one
- Less cross-disciplinary ambition
Head-to-Head Comparison
| London LF | Hay Festival | Edinburgh | Cheltenham | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| When | Oct 24–Nov 2 | May–June | August | October |
| Season | Autumn | Summer (best weather) | Summer | Autumn |
| Free events | 40+ free events | Limited | Some free | Limited |
| Location | Central London (SE1) | Rural Wales | Edinburgh city | Cheltenham town |
| Transport | 5 min from Waterloo | Requires car/coach | 4–5hrs from London | 2hrs from London |
| Scale (events) | 50+ | 600+ | 700+ | 200+ |
| Diversity | ✓✓ High | ✓ Good | ✓✓ High | Limited |
| 2026 standout | Dua Lipa curates | TBA | TBA | TBA |
| Children's programme | ✓✓ | ✓✓✓ Excellent | ✓✓ | ✓✓ |
| Poetry focus | National Poetry Library on-site | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Spoken word | Strong (Ghetts 2024, Dua Lipa 2026) | Moderate | Moderate | Limited |
| Tickets from | £15 (+ 40 free) | ~£10 | ~£12 | ~£12 |
"Every one of these festivals is worth your attention. But for the purest distillation of what literature means to a great, restless, diverse, contradictory city — London in October is where you need to be."
— LLF Editorial Team