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Here are the new stages – and Cinema returns

28.04.2026The festival

This summer, you’ll experience two brand-new stages and a larger Orange Stage, while Cinema makes its return. Explore this year’s stages here.

When we open the gates to this summer’s Roskilde Festival, it will be with major additions to the festival site:

We’re introducing a new and larger Orange Stage.

We’re welcoming two brand-new stages.

And for the first time since 2013, we’re reopening Cinema.

It means new ways to move through the festival. New places to pause, new routes between concerts, and new experiences to carry with you. Below, you can get an overview of what’s waiting.

Fauna – among the treetops

Fauna is a new stage set in green surroundings. Here, the music moves in among trees, shade, places to linger, and small pockets of calm. The name is a tribute to wild nature and lush surroundings, and you can feel it throughout the area. It’s a space for presence, pauses, and new concert experiences in a greener setting.

It’s a space where different expressions meet – from moments to lean back into, to concerts that pull you closer to the stage. Fauna emerges by The Garden in the north-east corner of the Inner Grounds, becoming a place where you can catch a show, lie back on the grass, clear your head, or step right into the energy.

Lagune – from start to finish

The second new stage is called Lagune, where the atmosphere is shaped by water, blue tones, and a maritime feel.

Lagune is a covered stage, taking over the tent from Avalon. Together with Eos, it forms the part of the festival where music runs from start to finish – during First Days (28–30 June) and throughout the rest of the festival.

Cinema returns

First Days at Roskilde Festival brings you concerts, campsite parties, community, and a wide range of activities. But there’s more to First Days.

You can also step into the dark at Cinema, which returns after 13 years, and watch new, Oscar-winning films such as Sentimental Value and Sinners, midnight screenings of iconic vampire films, and documentaries like Why Spotify’s CEO Is Worth Billions While Musicians Make Pennies, Christiania, and Amazomania.

The programme is curated by Roskilde Festival and Roskilde Festival Folk High School and created in collaboration with CPH:DOX, the European Parliament, The Why Foundation, RoskildeBio.nu, and the Danish Film School.

Orange Stage grows

You know Orange Stage. This summer, you’ll experience it in a new and larger version.

Our iconic stage is being expanded to accommodate even bigger productions. This also means changes to the area in front of the stage, creating more space and a new way to experience the festival’s largest gathering point.

Relive some of the most defining moments on the Orange Stage and take a journey through the history of Roskilde’s stages – from the early years to today.

Explore all stages

Eos

You’ll almost certainly end up at Eos at some point.

Partly because concerts run here from Sunday 28 June to Saturday 4 July. And partly because, with its central location in the middle of the festival site, Eos works as a natural meeting point between Camping East and Camping West.

At Eos, you can get close to the front or hang back and still take it all in. With its open layout and a line-up of exciting and fast-rising artists, it’s the kind of place where you sit down for five minutes and end up staying for an hour.

Gloria

From here, we move on. Into the barn.

Gloria is our smallest stage and sits just east of Orange Stage. Not far from the biggest stage, but once the door closes behind you and your eyes adjust to the darkness, you might just feel the rest of the festival fade away for a moment.

Arena

Arena is the second-largest stage at Roskilde Festival – and the biggest one under a roof.

Located in the eastern part of the Inner Grounds, it is built as a vast tent with space for 17,000 people and a ceiling height of around 25 metres.

Arena hosts major names and large-scale live productions, and this much-loved tent stage truly comes into its own when lighting, stage design, and visual effects unfold within the enclosed space.