Mint Festival in Leeds is back for 2021, after having a year away like most of other events in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The event will be taking place on one day only from 10am to 11pm on Saturday 25 September.
Musicians and acts such as Amelie Lens, East End Dubs and Ricardo Villalobos will be performing.
Festival organisers are recommending that attendees arrive before 12-1pm to avoid the queues.
Last entry will be at 8pm, with the bar closing at 10.30pm, food shutting at 10.45pm and music concluding at 11pm.
There will then be an after-party at the Mint Warehouse, with some limited tickets still on sale here.
Also like other festivals organisers will be requiring people to show proof of a negative lateral flow test taken within 48 hours of their arrival, or proof of full vaccination (two doses with the second having been administered at least 14 days before their arrival).
Here’s all you need to know about the festival this weekend.
What is the lineup for Mint Festival 2021?
We still have a limited number of tickets available for this year’s festival 🔥
— Mint Festival (@Mint_Festival) September 10, 2021
Tickets via https://t.co/dXWLk5qkSX pic.twitter.com/5pVnE1LQ4G
There will be a number of stages for attendees to watch the music, including Bunker, Open Air, the Valley and the Orchard.
Here’s who will be performing at these specific places, in no particular order of schedule.
Bunker: Patrick Topping, Ammara, Elliot Adamson, Gerd Janson, Maya Jane Coles, Will Clarke.
Open Air: Amelie Lens, Dax J, Farrago, OC & Verde, Pan-Pot, Sofi, Spektre.
The Valley: Darius Syrossian, East End Dubs, Eats Everything, Seb Zito, Tobias, plus a special guest still to be announced.
The Orchard: Ricardo Villalobos, Enzo Siragusa, Raresh, Rich Nxt, the Ghost, Annie Errez, Bobby O’Donnell.
Elsewhere at the festival there will be the likes of Emily Knight, Luke Shalom, Wildish, Zaffiro, Tej and Hyde House performing.
Where is Mint Festival 2021 being held?
It’s taking place in a brand new venue at Newsam Green Farm, Leeds, LS15 9AD.
How to buy tickets for Mint Festival 2021
Final release tickets are still on sale on the Mint Festival website.
All of them cost £82.50.
VIP final release tickets are also still available at £104.50.
The only way to purchase drinks and food at MiNT Fest 2021 💣
— Mint Festival (@Mint_Festival) September 9, 2021
Purchase drinks credits now via https://t.co/EJAI59YoH0 pic.twitter.com/BjeJx5wEFa
What is the age limit for Mint Festival 2021?
You will need to be 18-years-old to enter the festival.
The festival will be operating a challenge 25 policy and will require valid identification to be shown, otherwise you will be asked to leave the site.
Valid ID can be an in-date driver’s licence or provisional licence, a valid passport or a proof of age standards scheme card (showing the pass hologram).
How to buy food and drink at the Mint Festival 2021
It's all starting to take shape! 🏗
— Mint Festival (@Mint_Festival) September 17, 2021
We can't wait for you to see the brand new venue #newsamgreenfarm
9 days and counting! 🗓
Tickets - https://t.co/KASS7ba2Rc pic.twitter.com/x7hgBDmYtt
Cashless wristbands will be given out to attendees once their ticket is scanned.
This can be loaded up with credit ahead of the festival at their website here.
When attendees go up to a bar or food stall their wristband can easily be scanned to pay for the items.
It will be possible to add more credit if you run out at Top-Up stands at the venue.
It will also be important for festival-goers to keep their wristband so they can be refunded whatever they didn't spend.
What is the dress code for Mint Festival 2021?
No full tracksuits or tracksuit bottoms will be allowed to be work at the festival.
A tracksuit top worn with jeans/shorts is acceptable though.
Additionally, no rucksacks or camel packs are allowed, with bags not being allowed to be bigger than an A4 size.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here