6 Can't-Miss Spring Music Festivals in Georgia
In Georgia, we have weather on our side for a festival season that lasts all year long. The best of spring includes the best of Georgia's signature music festivals, where a cross-section of genres take you all across the state for a full experience of live music, local flavor, cultural celebration, and more.

Savannah Music Festival
Savannah Music Festival, March 27-April 12, 2025
Georgia's largest musical arts event and one of the most distinctive cross-genre music festivals in the world, the Savannah Music Festival is a world-class celebration of musical arts. Find a true medley of melodies where music ranges from country to folk to jazz to chamber. Venues showcase the best of Savannah’s walkable vibrancy and include intimate churches, synagogues and club venues, breezy outdoor street settings and revered cultural centers, and historic theatre spaces, like the Johnny Mercer Theater. With a strength in classical music, Americana, acoustic, and jazz — but also rock n’ roll, dance events, and a variety of world music — the Savannah Music Festival is the tie that binds an immersive, global music experience to peak spring in an iconic Southern city.
Due South, Thomasville, April 5, 2025
Due South, presented by Thomasville Center for the Arts, is an art, music, and food experience featuring artists and performers whose craft aligns with the raw, Americana feel the festival has cultivated since its debut in 2011. The event in downtown Thomasville celebrates a love for music and art in the town's ever-growing Creative District. Enjoy unique eats from food trucks, as well as local beer and wine as you soak up the soulful springtime vibe in this southwest Georgia town.

Trombone Shorty at SweetWater 420 Fest in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo by Addison Hill
SweetWater 420 Fest, Atlanta, April 18-19, 2025
With its annual dynamic blend of music, arts, and local brew, plus a healthy dose of food, entertainment, and respect for Mother Earth, the SweetWater 420 Fest is a revered annual tradition that celebrates springtime in the city. The festival features big-name bands, unique styles of SweetWater beers, an artist market, food court, and more. This is where beer, music, and the spring season get the best of each other. Early bird tickets and VIP options are available.

The MILL Amphitheater in Villa Rica, Georgia
West Georgia Jazz Festival, Villa Rica, April 26, 2025
Villa Rica is the birthplace of the Father of Gospel Music Thomas Dorsey, but before he wrote his best-known composition “Precious Lord, Take My Hand,” he was also a revered blues pianist who accompanied Ma Rainey with his Wild Cats Jazz Band. So, while Villa Rica is worth a return visit for the annual Thomas Dorsey Birthplace Festival in June, consider the West Georgia Jazz Festival a perfect spring primer to the city’s festival season, where jazz, blues, and gospel remain rooted. This rain-or-shine festival takes place at The MILL Amphitheater, and it features multiple acts during the day and an evening headliner. The event is free to attend, and reserved seating can be purchased.

Bear on the Square Mountain Festival in Dahlonega, Georgia
Bear on the Square Mountain Festival, Dahlonega, April 26-27, 2025
Bear on the Square is as authentic as it gets. This Appalachian heritage festival and experience will play you some mountain music -- or you pick your own fiddle, bajo, dulcimore, and more and join in on this annual town tradition. Dahlonega's historic public square is prime music territory for two full days, kicked off with pre-festival jam sessions on Friday as live music circulates all weekend. Spotlighting bluegrass and old-time music, Bear on the Square also includes a juried artist marketplace featuring traditional mountain crafts, storytelling, free music workshops and demonstrations, local wine and beer, dancing, and more against a backdrop of mountain city springtime charm.

Little Roy and Lizzie
Little Roy and Lizzie Music Festival, Lincolnton, May 1-3, 2025
The Lewis Family Homeplace in Lincolnton makes the perfect spring setting for the Little Roy and Lizzie Music Festival, a regional bluegrass experience featuring on-site camping and more bluegrass acts than you can shake a fiddlestick at. This rain-or-shine event has a big tent for inclement weather and has become a destination festival headlined by the talent of “Little Roy” Lincoln and Lizzy Long of the Little Roy and Lizzie Show. Little Roy has carried the Lincoln Family’s “First Family of Bluegrass Gospel” music tradition with him, recognized today as one of the foremost five-string banjo pickers in the country.