TL;DR

Singapore's July 2026 calendar stacks concerts, art fairs, food festivals, workshops and late-night events across Sentosa, Tanjong Pagar, Changi and Keppel Bay. School holidays make weekends sell out fast, so book ticketed events early and keep walk-in options as backup.

July 2026 brings more than 10 confirmed events across Singapore, concerts, art fairs, food festivals, late-night socials and hands-on workshops spread from Tanjong Pagar to Sentosa, Changi and Keppel Bay. School holidays are in full swing, which means venues are programming hard for families, couples and solo visitors who need a plan that isn't just another mall crawl.

The spread of locations matters. July's lineup isn't clustered in the CBD, it reaches Sentosa's beachfront, the hangars and terminals of Changi, and the waterside at Keppel Bay, giving you a genuine reason to move around the island rather than default to the same Orchard stretch. Whether you have a free Tuesday evening or a full long weekend, there's a format that fits.

Here's a quick breakdown of what July 2026 is stacking up across categories:

  • Concerts and live music: Multiple acts are scheduled across indoor and outdoor venues, with evening and late-night slots suited to after-dinner crowd flow.
  • Art fairs and exhibitions: Gallery-style and pop-up art events are running through the month, several with free entry periods or ticketed evening previews.
  • Food festivals: Curated food events in July lean into local and regional flavours, with hawker collabs and chef-led tastings appearing across different neighbourhoods.
  • Workshops: Hands-on sessions covering everything from ceramics to cocktail-making are bookable for groups or solo sign-ups, with most running on weekends.
  • Late-night social events: Rooftop parties, night markets and pop-up bar takeovers are scheduled across Tanjong Pagar and the Keppel Bay waterfront.

Prices across the July calendar are mixed, free community events sit alongside ticketed concerts that require advance booking. The smart move is to lock in anything with a fixed capacity early, especially school-holiday weekend slots, which tend to sell out faster than weekday equivalents. Most food festivals and art fairs carry walk-in options, but workshops and live shows are safer to pre-register.

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Why it matters: July is one of Singapore's busiest leisure months precisely because school holidays push families and visitors into active planning mode at the same time. If you're curating a social calendar, date nights, group outings, solo cultural days, this month's programming is genuinely varied enough to avoid repetition across four weekends. Book the ticketed events now, keep the walk-in options as flex, and you'll have a July that actually delivers.