Honey Dijon Leads Field Day Back to Brockwell Park on May 23

Honey Dijon Leads Field Day Back to Brockwell Park on May 23

Field Day returns to Brockwell Park on Saturday May 23, with the south London dance festival back in SE24 9JU for its second year after a decade in east London’s Victoria Park. Tickets are still available, and the schedule is tight: gates open at 12pm, last entry is 8pm and all music ends by 10.30pm.

Honey Dijon, Andy C and Eliza Rose are among the headline names attached to the 2026 bill, alongside Floating Points and Interplanetary Criminal. For readers deciding whether to go, the practical headline is simple: the event is locked to one day, entry cuts off at 8pm and there is no re-entry once inside.

Brockwell Park at 12pm

12pm is when the festival gates open, giving early arrivals a full day inside Brockwell Park before the 10.30pm finish. Field Day’s move back to the park last year reset the event’s London footprint after ten years in Victoria Park, and this edition keeps it there for a second straight year.

SE24 9JU is the postcode to use, and it places the festival squarely in south London rather than east London, where Field Day had spent a decade. That shift is now part of the event’s identity again, with Brockwell Park anchoring the late May Bank Holiday Weekend as summer festival season starts to build.

Honey Dijon and Andy C

Honey Dijon, Andy C and Eliza Rose give the bill its headline weight, while Floating Points and Interplanetary Criminal add more of the dance-music range Field Day is built around. The lineup tells buyers exactly what kind of day this is: a club-focused festival rather than a broad, all-genres gathering.

Field Day is also opening Brockwell Park’s first three major events over the long weekend, so this is not a one-off booking dropped into the calendar. For the park, that means the festival is the first big test of the site’s late-May run, and for ticket buyers it means the event sits at the front of the weekend’s live music slate.

8pm Last Entry Rule

8pm is the hard stop for new arrivals, and that no re-entry rule changes how people should plan the day. Arrive late and you miss the window; leave after entering and you are not getting back in, which makes transport, meet-up timing and set planning more important than usual.

Tickets are still available on the Field Day website, so the event is not sold out and there is still a live purchase decision to make. For anyone weighing it, the useful read is straightforward: this is a single-day south London dance bill with a fixed closing time, a capped entry window and enough major names to justify an early arrival.

That is the part that matters now — the festival is back in Brockwell Park, the lineup is in place and the remaining choice is whether to buy before the gate closes at 8pm.

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