The living guide to Africa's celebrations
Africa's festivals, kept alive by the people who live them.
When each one happens, what to expect, and the music, food and meaning behind it. One place to discover a celebration, and plan to be there.
98festivals
40countries
Kept current by the community
#1
F
May
Morocco
Festival of Roses
Celebration of rose harvest in Dades Valley
#2
M
Jul
Morocco
Moussem of Tan-Tan
UNESCO-recognized nomadic cultural festival
#3
C
Jun
Morocco
Cherry Festival
Annual celebration of cherry harvest in Sefrou
#4
M
Sep
Morocco
Moussem of Moulay Idriss
Religious and cultural pilgrimage festival
#5
I
Sep
Morocco
Imilchil Marriage Festival
Traditional Amazigh marriage festival
#6
D
Oct
Morocco
Date Festival of Erfoud
Celebration of date harvest in Tafilalet region
Kept current, not frozen. Members confirm dates and flag changes as festivals move year to year.
Reviewed, not scraped. Every addition and edit is checked before it goes live.
From the people who live them. Detail comes from the communities that celebrate.
Know a festival better than we do?
This guide is only as alive as the people keeping it current. If a celebration from your community is missing, or its details have moved on, help the continent find it, and get credited for it.
Add or improve a festival
Free · Reviewed before publishing · You're credited
Frequently asked questions
What is Lughayangu Festivals?
A living guide to festivals across Africa: when each one happens, what to expect, and the music, food, dress and meaning behind it. Every festival is kept current by a community that includes the people who celebrate them.
How current is the information?
Festivals shift year to year, so members confirm dates, flag changes and add detail continuously, and every change is reviewed before it goes live. That's what keeps this more accurate than a static list.
Can I plan a trip around a festival?
Yes. Each festival page shows its next date, how long it runs, where it's held and what happens, with an add-to-calendar option so you can plan around it.
Are these the same as public holidays?
No. Festivals are cultural celebrations, kept separate from statutory public holidays. Many aren't days off, and many move each year. You can explore official holidays in our Holidays section.
Is it free?
Yes, browsing African festivals on Lughayangu is completely free, and contributing is open to any registered member.