Lithuania’s most colourful celebration, the Vilnius Pink Soup Fest, is expanding to 3 days this year and will take place on 29-31 May. The decision to extend the event was due to the festival’s rapid growth, with visitor numbers jumping from 42,000 in 2024 to 93,000 last year. Unofficially marking the start of summer in Lithuania, this unique event celebrates šaltibarščiai, Lithuania’s iconic cold beetroot soup.
Featuring giant foam slides, crazy costumes and races, the festival feels like a Baltic equivalent of La Tomatina (a food fight festival in Spain) or Oktoberfest (a traditional German beer fest). At the festival’s heart is a true Lithuanian delicacy, which can be sampled in its traditional form or with creative modern twists. Events will be held all across the city, with even the city’s airport and train station getting the pink treatment.

The festival is a gastronomical celebration, but also an unofficial celebration of the arrival of summer. So with winter over and many travellers turning their attention to the summer season, now is the time to start planning a trip to Vilnius. In 2026, the trend toward cooler alternatives to the often uncomfortably hot Mediterranean countries is set to continue. This rise in “coolcations” prompted record tourism numbers across Scandinavia and the Baltic coast in 2025.
Riotous colour and silliness, welcoming locals, and delicious food
Visiting Vilnius Pink Soup Fest promises a stunning combination of riotous colour and silliness, welcoming locals, and delicious food. The centrepiece of the festival is the Pink Soup Parade, and visitors can expect to see dancers, marching bands, and waiters racing through the streets with bowls of pink soup. Packing pink clothes is advised, as there is an award for the best šaltibarščiai-themed costume. One of the festival’s partners is also organising a 10.5-kilometre walk through the streets of Vilnius.
European summer travel is undergoing a noticeable transformation. For many years, tourists planned holidays around sun-soaked beaches and warm Mediterranean cities. Lithuania is emerging as one of these new, “cooler” destinations, as Skyscanner’s Travel Trends 2026 is showing a 59% increase in travel searches for flights from the UK to Lithuania’s second-largest city, which is just an hour by train from Vilnius.

During a summer stay in Vilnius, visitors can spend a long summer afternoon visiting galleries and museums, walking one of the many nearby nature trails, or even taking a day-trip to Trakai – a popular destination known for its lakes, a stunning medieval castle and traditional cuisine. In addition, with frequent and reliable rail and coach connections, Vilnius can serve as the starting point for a longer Northern European coolcation.
Learn more about Go Vilnius here.












