Last updated on March 30, 2026
23 events and festivals in Bulgaria this April
In April, nothing sits still. All major holidays follow the lunar calendar, aligned with the spring equinox and the shifting balance between sun and moon.
This isn’t a collection of separate holidays, but a connected system. Each ritual builds on the previous one, moving from early spring awakening toward full renewal.
What begins in March as a quiet stirring takes form in April. By the time Easter arrives, that process is complete – both in nature and in the symbolic body of the land.
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These resources will help you plan your trip to Bulgaria:
- Flights: I compare prices on Kiwi, Skyscanner, and Omio.
- Accommodation: I mostly book with Booking, Vrbo, and Agoda.
- Tours & activities: I plan with GetYourGuide and Viator.
- Transfers: If i need an airport pickups or a transfer, I’d go to GetTransfer.
- Car rental: I compare prices on LocalRent or GetRentACar
- Mobile internet: Use eSIMs like Saily.
- Travel insurance: I usually check HeyMondo (5% off) or SafetyWing.
April – events in Bulgaria
- 03.04.2026 (Fri)
- Sofia city
- A formal city-organized concert marking 147 years since Sofia was declared Bulgaria’s capital. The Sofia Brass Band leads the program with marches and familiar pieces, the kind of repertoire that leans more civic than experimental.
- If you happen to be in Sofia that evening, it’s an easy way to step into the city’s official rhythm for an hour.
- 03-05.04.2026 (Fri-Sun)
- Lovech city
- Lovech takes Palm Sunday seriously, and has been doing so since the late 19th century. What you get is a layered local festival: an actual crafts fair (not just souvenir stalls), a regional folklore gathering, and traditional rituals like “kumichene,” which you’re unlikely to see outside this context.
- It’s busy but still grounded in tradition, especially compared to more commercial spring festivals elsewhere.
- 03-06.04.2026 (Fri-Mon)
- Sofia city
- A multi-day international festival focused on performance rather than audience experience. Participants include singers, dancers, and instrumentalists across categories like vocal, choreography, and instrumental music, with a strong presence of youth groups and competitions throughout.
- Worth knowing about if you’re involved in the arts; otherwise, this is more of a participant-driven event than something you plan a trip around.
- 04.04.2026 (Sat)
- Eco Park Varna
- A staged but still grounded version of Lazarovden, set inside Varna’s landscaped eco park. The program includes traditional “lazaruvane” performed by a local community center, alongside folk dances, music, and interactive elements like wreath-making workshops and horse areas.
- It leans family-friendly and slightly curated, but still gives you a clear view of the ritual without needing to chase it through villages.
- 04.04.2026 (Sat)
- Dryanovo (Dryanovo municipality, Gabrovo region)
- A more stripped-back, processional version of the Lazarovden custom, moving through the town from Kolyo Ficheto Square toward the Lokomotiv Stadium bridge. There’s less staging and fewer side activities, with the focus staying on the ritual itself.
- Short, local, and to the point.
- 04.04.2026 (Sat)
- Arbanasi (Veliko Tarnovo municipality, Veliko Tarnovo region)
- A folklore gathering built around the symbolic blessing of vineyards, mixing Lazarovden traditions with food, wine, and an open-air program. Expect folk songs, dancing, and plenty of people in traditional dress, alongside barbecue and local wine flowing steadily in the background.
- This sits somewhere between cultural event and social gathering, with the setting doing a lot of the work.
- 04-05.04.2026 (Sat-Sun)
- Sofia city, University Botanical Garden
- A softer, urban version of the spring holidays, built around a plant market and time spent outdoors rather than ritual reenactments. You’ll find garden-grown plants for sale, a small food and wine setup, and workshops for children, all inside one of Sofia’s more carefully maintained green spaces.
- Less folklore-heavy, more about atmosphere and an easy city pause.
- 04-05.04.2026 (Sat-Sun)
- Sofia city, Alexander Nevsky Square
- A central, highly visible folklore gathering right in front of Alexander Nevsky Cathedral. Groups from across Sofia and the surrounding region perform traditional songs, dances, and spring rituals tied to Lazarovden.
- Accessible and open, but expect a staged feel given the setting.
- 04-05.04.2026 (Sat-Sun)
- Elena (Elena municipality, Veliko Tarnovo region)
- A smaller-scale celebration set in the courtyard of House “Mina,” focusing on traditional customs, crafts, and local food. The program mixes concerts with demonstrations tied to Lazarovden and Tsvetnitsa, without trying to turn it into a large production.
- More intimate, and a better fit if you prefer context over crowd size.
- 04-05.04.2026 (Sat-Sun)
- Kozichino & Pomorie (Pomorie municipality, Burgas region)
- This is one of the few places where Lazarovden isn’t reconstructed – it’s carried by memory. The village of Kozichino (historically Erkech) preserves both “Little” and “Big” Lazari rituals, with participation spanning generations, from the youngest girls to the oldest women.
- It’s less about performance and more about continuity, which makes the songs and dances feel noticeably different from stage folklore.
- 05.04.2026 (Sun)
- Elin Pelin (Elin Pelin municipality, Sofia region)
- A structured folklore festival covering the full cycle of spring rituals, not just Lazarovden. Groups perform reenactments, songs, and dances tied to multiple seasonal rituals, moving between authenticity and staged interpretation depending on the ensemble.
- Useful if you want a condensed overview of Bulgarian spring traditions in one place.
- 04-05.04.2026 (Sat-Sun)
- Hisarya (Hisarya municipality, Plovdiv region)
- A historical reenactment event focused on the Roman past of Hisarya, when the town was known as Diocletianopolis. Expect gladiator fights, craft demonstrations, food inspired by antiquity, and plenty of spectacle layered over archaeological context.
- It’s theatrical by design, but grounded in a real site, which helps it land somewhere between education and performance.
- 10.04.2026 (Fri)
- Strinava Campsite near Dryanovo city (Dryanovo municipality, Gabrovo region)
- A guided group hike through one of the more varied sections of the Dryanovo region, linking monastery, river valley, and small villages. The route passes along the Andaka River, with stops at viewpoints and through Iglica village, which still holds a distinct rural character.
- It’s organized but not overly structured – closer to a shared walk than a formal tour.
- 17-29.04.2026
- Sofia city
- A city festival focused on chamber classical music and jazz, held in smaller venues and often scheduled later in the evening. The program combines concerts with masterclasses, leaning toward an audience that’s already interested rather than random drop-ins.
- Best approached intentionally, not as something you stumble into.
- 18.04.2026 (Sat)
- Pernik city
- A dance-centered folklore gathering with a clear participatory angle – this is as much about joining the horo as it is about watching performances. Groups come together to present and sustain Bulgarian dance traditions, but the atmosphere stays open and social.
- Less spectacle, more shared rhythm.
- 20-26.04.2026
- Plovdiv city
- A week-long street arts festival spread across Plovdiv, bringing together performers from 11 countries. The program usually moves between circus acts, performances, and open-air interventions, using the city itself as a stage rather than relying on fixed venues.
- It’s one of the few events that actually changes how the city feels for a few days, not just adding a program on top of it.
- 24-25.04.2026 (Fri-Sat)
- Sofia city
- A large-scale wine exhibition focused on breadth rather than intimacy. You move through hundreds of wines from across the world, with producers and importers present, including both established regions and smaller, less familiar ones.
- Useful if you want exposure and comparison; less so if you’re looking for a slow, local tasting experience.
- 25.04.2026 (Sat)
- Gabrene (Petrich municipality, Blagoevgrad region)
- A highly local food festival centered on a specific regional ingredient – butima, a wild spring plant used instead of vine leaves for sarma. The program mixes cooking workshops, tastings, and plant knowledge, alongside a small market of local products.
- This is niche by design, but that’s exactly why it works.
- 25.04.2026 (Sat)
- Bryagovitsa (Strazhitsa municipality, Veliko Tarnovo region)
- A local food festival built around lopush, a plant that rarely makes it into mainstream Bulgarian cuisine but still survives in regional cooking. Dishes range from soups to pastries and desserts, all competing across categories, with a folklore program running alongside.
- Small-scale, ingredient-focused, and very much tied to place.
- 25.04.2026 (Sat)
- Elin Pelin (Elin Pelin municipality, Sofia region)
- A niche gathering centered on seeds, biodiversity, and traditional plant varieties. Events like this usually bring together small producers, growers, and people interested in preserving agricultural diversity, rather than casual visitors.
- Not a spectacle, but meaningful if you care about where food actually begins.
- 25-26.04.2026 (Sat-Sun)
- Stara Zagora city
- A food-and-entertainment event built around a very specific local delicacy – crispy cooked pigs’ ears. Alongside the cooking, there’s a stage program with humor, performances, and general fair-style atmosphere.
- Unusual, a bit chaotic, and unapologetically local in taste and tone.
- 25-26.04.2026 (Sat-Sun)
- Burgas city
- A large-scale youth robotics event built around competition, but expanded into a full program of exhibitions and interactive zones. Teams present robot solutions and projects (this year tied to archaeology) while younger participants showcase early-stage ideas through LEGO builds.
- It’s structured and busy, but if you’re traveling with kids or have an interest in STEM, this is one of the few events in April that’s genuinely hands-on.
- 24-26.04.2026 (Fri-Sun)
- Sofia city
- A contemporary tech-and-culture festival exploring how humans and systems interact, with a program that moves between talks, exhibitions, workshops, and film. The focus isn’t just on technology itself, but on the values behind it – how design, care, and decision-making shape what gets built.
- Concept-driven and discussion-heavy, this is closer to a thinking space than a traditional festival.
Traditional Bulgarian holidays in April
April in Bulgaria moves fully into spring, but not cleanly. Most traditions sit between seasons, beliefs, and life stages.
You’ll see that tension most clearly around Lazarovden, Tsvetnitsa, and Easter:
- Lazarovden / Lazaritsa (Saturday before Easter) – The first major holiday of April, and traditionally a women-centered one. In folk belief, it marks the awakening of nature – fields, forests, and pastures coming back to life. In the Orthodox calendar, it marks the resurrection of Lazarus of Bethany.
- Lazaruvane (ritual practice) – Groups of girls dress in traditional clothing, wear flower wreaths, and go from house to house singing ritual songs. Each household receives a personalized blessing through song. In the past, this wasn’t optional; a girl had to take part to be considered ready for marriage.
- Boenek (ritual dance) – A ritual dance with high jumps, white cloths, and symbolic movement tied to agricultural growth. In some regions, one girl dresses as a male figure (the symbolic groom). The whole structure reflects ideas of pairing, fertility, and transition.
- Tsvetnitsa / Vrabnitsa / Kuklinden (Sunday after Lazarovden) – This is Palm Sunday, adapted locally through the use of willow (varba) instead of palm or olive branches. Willow is seen as the first tree to “wake up”. And in folk belief, it carries protective and healing qualities and is used in rituals around illness and childbirth.
- Kumichene (ritual practice) – Girls gather by a river and release willow wreaths into the water. The one whose wreath moves fastest is symbolically the first to marry and becomes the group’s leader (kumitsa). In older beliefs, the ritual also protects the girl from being stolen by a mythical being (zmey).
- Velikden (Easter) – The most important holiday in Bulgaria, timed as the first full moon after the spring equinox. It sits at the balance point between light and dark, which is why it’s associated with renewal. In Christianity, it marks the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
- Egg rituals – Eggs are central and treated as objects with protective force, not just symbols. They’re dyed red on Holy Thursday or early Saturday morning, and used in multiple rituals. The first red egg (perashka) is kept throughout the year for health and protection.
Stef’s local tips
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Stefani Gospodinova
Founder and Content Creator
Stefani is a travel blogger born and raised in Bulgaria, and the founder of Kiss My Backpack. Having explored the country since childhood, she shares practical tips, local insights, and her own photography to help visitors plan their trip.
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