Nashville Lantern Festival returns to Nashville Civic Grounds in Nashville, Tennessee — a Mid-February for Lunar New Year Cultural and Heritage that has become one of the defining outdoor gatherings on the Nashville calendar. A Lunar New Year lantern festival in Nashville with a lighted parade, fireworks at sunset, and street vendors selling dim sum from carts.
About the festival
Nashville Lantern Festival is rooted in a specific community or heritage tradition that has been celebrated in Nashville for generations. The schedule mixes a public-facing parade or street festival with smaller invitation-only ceremonies inside churches, cultural centers, or community halls. Costumes, music, and dance forms are studied and rehearsed in the months leading up to the event, and the result feels less like entertainment than like the public expression of a shared identity. Visitors are warmly welcomed but encouraged to read the festival program first to understand what they are watching.
What to expect
Read the program before you arrive so you understand the meaning behind the parade order, the costumes, and the music. Vendors selling traditional foods are usually concentrated in a cultural village near the main stage. Small donations to community organizations and church kitchens are warmly welcomed.
Nashville in February
Nashville is a long-standing host of outdoor festival programming in Tennessee, and the downtown core has been steadily revitalized over the past decade with new music venues and food halls. Visitors heading to a cultural festival here will find the surrounding district especially walkable on event weekends, with most of the popular hotels and restaurants within a short rideshare of the festival grounds. Locals tend to recommend arriving the night before opening day to settle in, eat dinner somewhere unhurried, and beat the morning festival traffic.
February in Nashville brings winter festival programming and Mardi Gras-adjacent gatherings; pack layers and waterproof boots if you are visiting from a warmer climate.
Planning your visit
Nashville Civic Grounds is the established home of this cultural and heritage in Nashville, Tennessee, and the venue knows how to handle festival crowds. On-site parking is usually limited; most attendees rely on a combination of rideshare, regional transit, and walking from nearby hotel districts. Festival tickets are typically sold in tiers — single day, multi-day, and VIP — with VIP options including dedicated entrances, reserved viewing areas, and air-conditioned lounges. Family attendees should check the festival website for stroller, kid, and teen pricing. Pets are usually not permitted on the festival footprint other than service animals.
Festivals nearby
If you are planning a longer trip around Nashville Lantern Festival, these other gatherings in or near Nashville are worth combining into the same itinerary:
Categories and tags
This event is filed under Cultural and Heritage on FestFinder. Browse more cultural and heritage across the country, or jump to our pages for Nashville events and Tennessee events using the links below.