Parksville–Qualicum events

Markets, festivals, live music, and community events in Parksville–Qualicum — updated as new events are approved.

This is the Vancouver Island events calendar: farmers markets, festivals, fall fairs, live music and community gatherings across all nine Island regions, each one verified with its organizer before it's published. Filter by region, see what's on this weekend — and if you're running something, from a weekly market to a fundraiser, gallery opening or race, listing it here is free and takes about two minutes.

Year-round

What's on around the Island

Vancouver Island doesn't really have an off-season — the calendar just changes costume. Every event listed here is real and checked against its organizer's own site before it's published, with dates, location and a link to the official page, so you can plan a weekend around it without second-guessing whether it's actually happening.

Summer: festival season

From June through August the Island runs at full volume. Downtown Duncan hosts one of the longest-running daily music festivals anywhere, Parksville's beach fills with world-class sand sculpture, and seaside parks from Comox to Victoria stage artisan markets, outdoor concerts, and food truck gatherings. Farmers markets hit their stride in nearly every town — the Cowichan Valley and Comox Valley markets are destinations in their own right.

Fall: fair season

September belongs to the agricultural fairs, some of them running for more than 150 years — livestock and logger sports, prize quilts and produce, midway rides and community pride. It's also harvest time in the wine and cider country over the Malahat, when tasting rooms and farm gates put on their best show.

Winter and spring: the local months

Winter is storm-watching season on the Pacific Rim and small-hall season everywhere else: craft fairs, theatre, live music in pubs and community halls from Victoria to Nanaimo. By March the whale-watching boats are back for the grey whale migration, spring markets open, and the cycle winds up again. Some of the Island's best events happen in these quieter months, when the crowds are thin and the events are made mostly for the people who live here.

Planning around an event

A little Island logic goes a long way. Multi-day festivals are the easiest anchors for a visit — the cards below show full date ranges, and anything marked “on now” is running today. If an event pulls you to a region you don't know, its region page lists the verified cafés, restaurants and places worth your time while you're there — that's what the Explore pages are for. Book ferries and beds early for summer weekends: when a big festival lands in a small town, the nearest rooms go first, and the mainland ferries fill days ahead. Every event title links to the organizer's official site, so check there for tickets and last-minute changes — weather rearranges outdoor plans on this coast more often than organizers do.

Annual traditions worth planning around

Some Island events are institutions you can set a calendar by. Duncan's 39 Days of July fills downtown with free live music every single day of its run — one of the longest-running daily music festivals anywhere. Parksville's beach hosts an international sand-sculpting competition each summer, with the giant works left standing on display for weeks afterward. August brings the Filberg Festival's juried artisans to seaside gardens in Comox, and September belongs to the agricultural fairs: the Saanich Fair has run since 1868, and the Cowichan Exhibition isn't far behind — livestock, logger sports, prize quilts and midway rides, going strong past their 150th editions. And every Saturday, year-round, the Duncan Farmers' Market gathers a hundred-plus vendors in City Square. Whatever week you land on the Island, something above has probably already started.

Running an event?

Listing is free and takes a couple of minutes: submit your event with the date, location and your official page, and it's typically approved and live within a day. Markets, festivals, fundraisers, gallery openings, races, workshops: if it's on the Island and open to the public, it belongs here. Events also appear in directory search and get proper event markup for Google, so a listing here helps people find your event elsewhere too. And if you want it in front of subscribers, The Island Brief newsletter regularly features what's coming up.

July 2026