The world’s most influential film festivals, what sets each one apart, and when they run in 2026
Introduction
Film festivals aren’t just red carpets and premieres. They’re where distribution deals happen, where first features get discovered, and where a good chunk of the year’s most interesting work in cinematography reaches an audience before anywhere else. Whether you’re submitting a short, planning a trip to watch and learn, or just want a clearer map of the festival year, it helps to know which events actually matter and when they land.
This guide covers the major festivals worth tracking, first as a reference list explaining what sets each one apart, then as a chronological calendar for 2026 you can use for planning.
The Big Five
Five festivals are generally treated as the industry’s most influential: the ones that shape awards conversations, launch distribution deals, and get covered by every major trade outlet.
- Cannes Film Festival, France, held every May. It’s the highest-profile festival in the world, and still the one most filmmakers dream of premiering at. The Palme d’Or carries more prestige than almost any award outside the Oscars.
- Venice International Film Festival, running on Italy’s Lido since 1932, it’s the oldest film festival in the world and has become a major launchpad for awards-season contenders, often setting the tone for the fall.
- Berlin International Film Festival, known as the Berlinale. Held every February, it’s the most publicly accessible of the majors, with a huge public ticket sale running alongside its industry program, and it’s known for a strong political and social edge in its selections.
- Sundance Film Festival, Park City, Utah, every January. This is the launchpad for American independent film, where more distribution deals for first-time directors get made than almost anywhere else.
- Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), every September. Often called the unofficial start of North American awards season, its audience award has a strong track record of predicting the eventual Best Picture winner.
Other Major Festivals Worth Knowing
Beyond the Big Five, these festivals carry real weight in their own right, whether for genre, documentary, animation, or regional focus.
- SXSW, Austin, Texas, in March. It started as a music and tech event but has grown into a serious launchpad for genre film, comedy, and buzzy indies.
- Tribeca Festival, New York City, in June. Founded after 9/11 to help revive Lower Manhattan, it’s now a major stop for narrative and documentary premieres alike.
- Telluride Film Festival, Colorado, late August. Small and famously secretive about its lineup until the festival starts, it’s a frequent early stop for eventual Oscar contenders.
- Locarno Film Festival, Switzerland, in August. One of the most respected festivals for discovering auteur and arthouse work, with a huge outdoor screening in the Piazza Grande.
- Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, Czech Republic, in July. The major festival of Central and Eastern Europe, and one of the oldest still running.
- San Sebastian International Film Festival, Spain, in September. Spain’s premier festival and a key gateway for Spanish-language and Latin American cinema.
- New York Film Festival (NYFF), late September into October. A tightly curated, non-competitive festival run by Film at Lincoln Center, often screening the year’s most acclaimed films before wide release.
- BFI London Film Festival, UK, in October. The UK’s flagship festival, drawing a broad mix of premieres from across the international circuit.
- Busan International Film Festival, South Korea, September into October. Asia’s largest film festival and the primary launch point for East and Southeast Asian cinema.
- Annecy International Animation Film Festival, France, in June. The world’s leading festival dedicated entirely to animation, from studio features to experimental shorts.
- Sheffield DocFest, UK, in June. One of the most important documentary-only festivals, paired with a strong industry marketplace.
- Hot Docs, Toronto, in April and May. North America’s largest documentary festival.
- IDFA, Amsterdam, in November. The world’s largest documentary festival, and the one that closes out the festival calendar each year.
- Palm Springs International Film Festival, California, in January. Kicks off the calendar year, closely tied to the awards season, and known for its focus on international submissions for the Oscars.
- Fantasia International Film Festival, Montreal, July into August. North America’s leading genre festival, covering horror, sci-fi, and cult film.
2026 Festival Calendar
Dates shift slightly year to year, so treat this as a planning reference and confirm exact dates on each festival’s official site closer to the time.
| Month | Festival | 2026 Dates | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | Palm Springs International Film Festival | Jan 2–13 | Palm Springs, USA |
| January | Sundance Film Festival | Jan 22 – Feb 1 | Park City, USA |
| January/February | International Film Festival Rotterdam | Jan 29 – Feb 8 | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
| February | Berlin International Film Festival | Feb 12–22 | Berlin, Germany |
| March | SXSW | Mar 12–18 | Austin, USA |
| April/May | Hot Docs | Apr 23 – May 3 | Toronto, Canada |
| May | Cannes Film Festival | May 12–23 | Cannes, France |
| June | Tribeca Festival | Jun 3–14 | New York City, USA |
| June | Sheffield DocFest | Jun 10–15 | Sheffield, UK |
| June | Annecy International Animation Film Festival | Jun 21–27 | Annecy, France |
| July | Karlovy Vary International Film Festival | Jul 3–11 | Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic |
| July/August | Fantasia International Film Festival | Jul 16 – Aug 2 | Montreal, Canada |
| August | Locarno Film Festival | Aug 5–15 | Locarno, Switzerland |
| August | Telluride Film Festival | Aug 28–31 | Telluride, USA |
| September | Venice International Film Festival | Sep 2–12 | Venice, Italy |
| September | Toronto International Film Festival | Sep 10–20 | Toronto, Canada |
| September | Busan International Film Festival | Sep 16–25 | Busan, South Korea |
| September | San Sebastian International Film Festival | Sep 18–26 | San Sebastian, Spain |
| September/October | New York Film Festival | Sep 25 – Oct 12 | New York City, USA |
| October | BFI London Film Festival | Oct 7–18 | London, UK |
| November | IDFA | Nov 12–22 | Amsterdam, Netherlands |
How Festival Timing Works
The festival calendar has a rhythm to it once you’ve watched it for a year or two. Winter opens the year with Sundance, Palm Springs, and Rotterdam, which lean independent and international. Spring and early summer bring genre and documentary-heavy events like SXSW, Hot Docs, and Sheffield DocFest. Cannes in May is the industry’s biggest marketplace, where distribution deals for the rest of the year often get set. Late summer through fall is “awards season” proper, when Telluride, Venice, and Toronto run within about two weeks of each other and are widely watched as the first real read on which films will contend for major awards. The year winds down with IDFA, the documentary world’s biggest gathering.
If you’re planning to submit work, most festivals open submissions six to nine months ahead of their screening dates, so the deadlines for a given year’s Sundance or Cannes have usually already passed by the time the festival itself is making headlines.
Conclusion
There’s no single correct list of major film festivals. Prestige and relevance shift over time, and plenty of smaller festivals do excellent work outside this list. But the events above are a solid starting point for understanding the shape of the festival year, whether you’re tracking premieres, planning submissions, or just trying to figure out why everyone’s talking about Cannes in May and Telluride in August. Bookmark this page and check back each year as dates get confirmed.