Before the July school holiday juggle begins, there’s one winter weekend outing worth putting on the family calendar. The Katoomba Winter Magic Festival returns on Saturday 20 June 2026, bringing costumes, music, markets, street performers and a big dose of Blue Mountains colour to the shortest day of the year.
Running since 1994, this volunteer-run festival has become one of the Blue Mountains’ most loved community celebrations. It’s free, famously welcoming and just eccentric enough to make the drive or train ride feel properly worth it.

For one day, Katoomba Street becomes a car-free pedestrian zone, with street performers, live music, artisan stalls, food, workshops, interactive art and costumed festival-goers roaming through town.
More than 100 market stalls line the street, with artisan crafts, jewellery, gifts and winter comfort food. There’s also entertainment across historic venues, including music showcases, comedy and arts programming.
The whole thing has a handmade, mountain-town energy: a bit theatrical, a bit witchy, and much more memorable than another cold-weather lap of the local park.

The Grand Parade is the festival’s big drawcard, with dancers, musicians, drummers and locals moving through the streets in a bright, noisy, gloriously over-the-top procession.
Expect costumes, colour, music and plenty for kids to point at. Younger children will love the spectacle, older kids may pretend they’re above it (whilst secretly watching the whole thing – there will be loads of ‘gram worthy territory).
And yes, dressing up is encouraged. This is the moment to let the costume box earn its floor space. Capes, beanies, fairy wings, dramatic coats, tiny wizards, sparkles and anything vaguely “weirdest and witchiest” will fit right in.

Winter Magic isn’t just fairy wings and market stalls for little kids. This year, the festival is launching Youth Street, a dedicated youth precinct at the Katoomba Civic Centre created specifically for young people.
It’s been developed in partnership with local youth organisations including Mountains Youth Services Team (MYST), Street University, Wellways, Belong Blue Mountains Pick n Mix and Blue Mountains City Council, with local artist, MC and community youth leader TOAH coordinating the precinct.
Across the day, Youth Street will bring together music, workshops, open mic sessions and live performances in a safe, youth-friendly space.
The line-up includes a 12pm Music Sesh Workshop with TOAH, where young creatives can lay down beats and make music, followed by a 1pm Open Mic Session hosted by Street Uni in the Civic Centre forecourt.
From 2pm to 5pm, Undercurrent 2: Local Music Showcase takes over Tibbi Whalan Hall, featuring emerging Blue Mountains bands Club Halifax, Acid Amora and EFTPOS Surcharge.
There’ll also be community connection, workshops and free warm chai from the Wellways team’s WANDA van out the front.

As the day winds down, the celebrations continue into the evening, with fireworks planned above the iconic Carrington Hotel.
The early evening timing makes it more family-friendly than a late-night city fireworks mission, but play it by ear. A full day in Katoomba, in winter, with crowds, is a lot. There is no parenting medal for pushing through fireworks with a child who has become 80 per cent whinge and 20 per cent beanie.

For Inner West families, the train is probably the neatest move. Katoomba is on the Blue Mountains Line, with direct services from Sydney that make it a very doable winter day trip.
The trip from Central usually takes around two hours, depending on the service, and you can tap on with an Opal card or contactless payment. No booking, no ticket-printing, no “where did I put the confirmation email?” spiral.
You may also be able to connect via major stations including Strathfield, Parramatta, Blacktown and Penrith, depending on where you’re starting from.
Check the Transport for NSW Trip Planner before you leave, pack train snacks, and aim for an earlier service if you want time to wander before the parade. Driving is doable, but with festival crowds and road closures, parking may be where the magic goes to die.
A little planning will make the difference between winter magic and crowd-induced regret.
What: Winter Magic Festival
Where: Katoomba Street, Katoomba
When: Saturday 20 June 2026
Best for: Families, day-trippers, market wanderers, costume-loving kids and parents keen for a winter outing that feels a bit special
Good to know: Dress warmly, arrive early if you can, expect crowds and check event updates before heading up.