PILTON, England — Glastonbury Festival closed on Sunday with the final headline performance on the Pyramid Stage as crowds departed Worthy Farm in Somerset. Organisers began clearing the site ahead of a scheduled fallow year in 2027.
The festival, run by Michael and Emily Eavis, returned to its traditional late-June slot this year after staging one of its largest editions. Emily Eavis, who oversees day-to-day operations, previously confirmed that 2027 will serve as a rest year to allow the land and local area to recover.
Sunday's programme featured the traditional teatime 'legends' slot on the Pyramid Stage, followed by the final headline act. Performances continued across the Other Stage, West Holts and the late-night areas of the South East corner. Festival partnerships with Oxfam, WaterAid and Greenpeace through the Glastonbury Festival Eavis charity remained central to the weekend's programming.
Worthy Farm staff and Mendip stewards began the lengthy clean-up operation as ticket-holders departed on Monday morning. Traffic management plans were in place for the surrounding villages, with Avon and Somerset Police providing event policing throughout the weekend.
Eavis described the fallow year as giving the farm and community "time to breathe" before the festival's planned return in 2028.