Pécs is tuning up for a full year of live music, stage shows, and after-hours culture set across its historic center and the Zsolnay Cultural Quarter, the dynamic arts hub reborn on the grounds of the former porcelain factory. From jazz quartets and candlelit rock ballads to symphonic Queen and ballet classics, 2026 brings a curated spread of events, plus brewery tours, weekly highlights, and grand stages like the Kodály Center and the Synagogue. Here’s the lineup, the vibe, and where to stay when the curtain falls.
Start in March. On March 5, Metronóm Jazz Club hosts the Oláh Krisztián Quartet in Pécs, a sharp warm-up for the season. Two weeks later, on March 19, THE MUSIC OF LUDOVICO EINAUDI TRIBUTE lands at PKK Apáczai Cultural House, ticketed from about $35 to $41. It returns as a standalone highlight in the monthly guides too, so expect demand.
April is stacked. On April 8, ROCK BALLADS BY CANDLELIGHT (Rockballadák gyertyafényben) brings glowing nostalgia to the PKK Apáczai hall for roughly $35–$41. The same night, HOBO 80+1 at the Kodály Center salutes the legendary performer, with tickets around $32–$43. On April 19, Co Lee Live Band adds a fresh live groove somewhere in the city. Then May 9 brings FREDDIE – SOUL DIVER: INNER FIRE (Lélekbúvár: Belső tűz) back to PKK Apáczai, a one-price night at roughly $28.
Autumn returns with grandeur. On September 24, organist Gergely Rákász presents MOZART in the atmospheric Synagogue, from about $16 to $22. On November 16, QUEEN Symphonic Live rocks the Kodály Center in stadium-grade style scaled for symphony, tickets roughly $27–$41. And November 18 sets a sharp contrast: Tvrtko – Chernobyl 40 (Csernobil 40), an exclusive talk priced around $22.
Pécs runs like a metronome: weekly program guides for the city and the Zsolnay Quarter publish throughout spring and summer, spotlighting exhibitions, family events, films, and pop-ups. The National Theatre of Pécs (Pécsi Nemzeti Színház) steadies the stage calendar with performances across March 1–8, March 10–14, March 19–29, and a single day on March 31, generally $10–$34.
Ballet sweeps in mid-March: Swan Lake (Hattyúk tava) performs on March 11 and 12. Comedies and classics pop up too—Waltz by Candlelight (Gyertyafénykeringő), a two-act musical comedy on March 22 at about $20; Burn Out Baby – The Six Rules of Effective Leadership on March 28, delivered by actress Eszter Ónodi from a script by Gergely Litkai, roughly $27–$31; Michael Cooney’s farce Look Who’s Here?! (Nicsak, ki lakik itt?!) on May 22 for around $25–$28; and later in the year, Same Time, Next Year (Jövőre veled ugyanitt!) on November 5 at about $17.
And for spectacle: LORD OF THE DANCE brings its 30th-anniversary tour on March 30, a calendar-shaking Monday primed for full houses.
The Zsolnay Cultural Quarter keeps the pages turning with weekly highlights and a recurring “Two for Half Price – Seniors’ Days” (Ketten féláron – Nyugdíjas napok), running March 5–8, March 12–15, March 19–22, and March 26–29. It’s a reason to bring a friend and stretch the weekend. Add in the architecture binge: Festival and Night of Architecture (Építészet Ünnepe és Éjszakája) on April 25–26 turns the city into an open atlas for design lovers.
If your soundtrack needs barley and hops, every Saturday is booked for “Discover the Pécsi Brewery!” (Fedezd fel a Pécsi Sörfőzdét!). Discover the Pécsi Brewery with a guided tasting tour across Saturdays from March 7 straight through June 27, then July 4 and 11, and deep into spring dates on April 4, 11, 18, 25; May 2, 9, 16, 23, 30; and June 6, 13, 20, 27. It’s the city’s most reliable Saturday ritual.
On April 20, psychologist Noémi Orvos-Tóth fronts “How Do We Break Inherited Family Patterns?”—a rare chance to tackle intergenerational scripts in one sitting. March also nods to Women’s Day with “Keep Playing Till Daybreak – Women’s Day” (Húzzad csak, kivilágos virradatig – Nőnapi) on March 3 for around $14–$17.
Pécs doesn’t just stage the nights—it frames them. Adele Boutique Hotel Pécs sets four-star elegance in a 19th-century protected heritage building in the old town, blending period detail with crisp, modern finishes across rooms and apartments. Close by, Barbakán Hotel sits behind Pécs Cathedral, a three-star option with two-, three-, and four-bed rooms, conference space, and an underground garage—ideal if you’re driving in for a weekend of shows.
For a hillside retreat, Bagolyvár looks over Pécs from Havihegy, prized for clear air and a hush rarely found so near a city. Its quirk is its character: nineteen rooms shaped by motifs from Hungarian folk art and six suites modeled on historic wine presses, each designed to channel the mood of a celebrated Hungarian grape variety. The restaurant leans Hungarian with flourishes of the international, reviving classic dishes and desserts in a space dressed to match.
Prefer a quiet base above the center? A family-run guesthouse in the Mecsek hillside villa district sits minutes from forest trails and just as close to downtown. The Pécs Zoo and the Da Vinci private clinic are nearby, and Mandulás—one of the city’s favorite green getaways—offers playgrounds, fire pits, and trailheads, including the path toward the TV Tower. Groups can even request free guided hikes.
– Prime venues: PKK Apáczai Cultural House, Kodály Center, the Synagogue, the Zsolnay Quarter, and the National Theatre of Pécs.
– Tickets: expect roughly $16–$43 for major concerts and theater, with specials like seniors’ half-price days at Zsolnay.
– Weeklies: the city and Zsolnay both publish weekly program guides—use them to stack your nights and catch pop-up gems.
– Weekends: lock in Saturday brewery tours early; they sell out when big shows land the same weekend.
Pécs in 2026 is a playlist you can live inside: jazz clubs, candlelit choruses, symphonic rock, ballet arcs, and late-night walks between heritage hotels and hillside views. Bring good shoes—and leave extra room in the calendar.