If you’ve never been to the OC Fair, the name alone doesn’t tell you much. A fair, sure, but what kind? The county kind, the small-town kind, the boring kind? None of the above. The Orange County Fair is one of the largest annual events in California, drawing over a million visitors across 23 days every summer. Think carnival rides, live concerts, over-the-top fair food, farm animals, art competitions, and a crowd that shows up ready to stay all day.
Consider this your pre-visit briefing:
The 2026 OC Fair runs July 17 through August 16; 23 days across the peak of the Southern California summer. It’s held at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa, open Wednesday through Sunday (closed Mondays and Tuesdays).
The grounds cover 150 acres, enough space to lose a few hours without retracing your steps.
Hours:
This is the 136th year of the fair, and its 2026 theme is “Your Adventure Awaits”, a nod to the American spirit of discovery. The tagline is fitting: most first-timers spend the whole day wandering and still don’t cover everything.
The OC Fair offers several admission options, so it’s worth choosing the one that best fits your plans for visiting:
Check the official parking page before you go, since parking rates and access points can change by season. In past years, general parking has sold separately from admission, and busy evenings can fill nearby lots quickly.
The midway is a full amusement-park setup: thrill rides, spinning contraptions, and a Ferris wheel (the Le Grande Wheel XL) that offers a view over the entire grounds. For younger kids, KidLand offers a scaled-down version with age-appropriate rides, meet-and-greets, and crafts.
A three-acre working farm right on the fairgrounds. You can watch pig races, meet goats, see baby pigs, talk to beekeepers and master gardeners, and catch livestock competitions. It’s genuinely educational, as the farm welcomes 25,000 students annually for tours, but it doesn’t feel like a school trip. Kids love it. Adults find it surprisingly charming.
The Pacific Amphitheater and The Hangar host concerts throughout the fair’s run. These are proper ticketed shows; admission to the fair and a concert are bundled together on show nights, so your ticket gets you into the grounds that day at no extra cost. Shows draw a wide range of acts, and the Amphitheater has been a Southern California summer institution since 1983.
This is one of the more underrated parts of the fair. The grounds host art shows, craft competitions, culinary judging, photography contests, quilting displays, and more. Heroes Hall, a veterans museum inside the fairgrounds, runs rotating historical exhibits year-round and is free to explore with your admission.
This year’s special exhibit highlights iconic beachside landmarks, an aquatic touch tank, and a virtual reality experience. It’s a nod to Orange County’s coastline and makes for a natural break between rides and food.
Fair food deserves its own category. You’ll find the usual deep-fried classics alongside more adventurous combinations that push what “fair food” even means. Budget accordingly, food vendors are everywhere, and the options are genuinely good. Eating before you arrive helps, but it won’t stop you from buying something the moment you smell it.
The OC Fair & Event Center sits at 88 Fair Drive in Costa Mesa. Most people drive, but parking fills quickly on weekend nights. OCTA runs an OC Fair Express bus from six locations for $2 each way: it drops you directly at the Yellow Gate and saves you the parking search entirely. Rideshare drop-off is at Gate 1.
Groups arriving from LAX or staying in different parts of Orange County often avoid parking delays by arranging transportation ahead of time, especially after concerts when traffic near Fair Drive slows dramatically.
The OC Fair is 23 days of carnival rides, farm animals, live music, competitions, and food you’ll justify by calling it “the fair experience.” It runs July 17 to August 16, 2026, Wednesday through Sunday, at the OC Fair & Event Center in Costa Mesa. Tickets start at $11 for early-entry weekday admission, and the $60 Every Day Passport covers you for the full run.
If you’ve been on the fence, this is the year to go. The 136th edition of anything has figured out what it’s doing.
