Reggae Land returns to Milton Keynes National Bowl on Friday 31 July, Saturday 1 August and Sunday 2 August 2026 for its sixth and most ambitious edition to date. With more than 120 artists performing across seven stages, this is one of the biggest reggae and dancehall festival line-ups ever assembled anywhere in the world.

Friday night’s main stage is headlined by Burna Boy, joined by Masicka, Christopher Martin and Julian Marley and The Uprising. Saturday’s main stage is led by the exclusive world debut of supergroup The King and The Royals, uniting Beenie Man and Morgan Heritage for a historic live experience that brings together their two Grammy-winning legacies. They are joined by debut Reggae Land performances from Tarrus Riley, Barrington Levy and Jah9, alongside Konshens and Kranium. Sunday welcomes Vybz Kartel making his long-awaited Reggae Land debut, alongside Grammy-nominated Shenseea and Shaggy, who returns to the festival for the first time since headlining the very first Reggae Land. Super Cat, Inner Circle and Mo’Kalamity and The Wizards complete Sunday’s main stage line-up.

Away from the main stage, the One Love Stage honours roots and conscious sounds, the new Dancehall Stage delivers high-energy sound system culture, the Carnival Stage brings crossover energy and bass-driven sounds, and the Dub Stage returns with heavyweight sound system culture. Rompa’s Reggae Shack returns across the weekend, while the newly introduced Bob’s Bar Stage provides a dedicated space for roots reggae, dub and lovers rock. Across these stages, artists include General Levy, Congo Natty, Mad Professor, Scientist and Iration Steppas.

Since moving to the National Bowl, Reggae Land has transformed the venue into a Caribbean cultural hub combining world-class performances with Caribbean food villages, rum bars, flea markets, museum spaces and immersive decor. In 2026, the festival expands with two new stages, higher production levels and up to 100,000 attendees across the weekend. There is no on-site camping, but the venue is well placed for Milton Keynes town centre hotels.

The closest train station is Milton Keynes Central, a six-minute drive from the National Bowl. A pedestrian route takes roughly 20 to 25 minutes on foot from MK Central to the Bowl. Carbon-neutral day-return coaches travel directly to the Bowl, arriving before the music starts and departing after the headliners. Coach pick-up points span the country, including London, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Leeds, Manchester, Nottingham, Oxford and many more. Note that most ticket tiers listed on the official site are currently showing as sold out, so check www.reggaeland.co.uk for any additional releases.