EG Presents, the powerhouse behind BST Hyde Park, is expanding north with the launch of Roundhay Festival in Leeds. Set in the legendary Roundhay Park - a venue that’s hosted Michael Jackson, Madonna, The Rolling Stones and Ed Sheeran - the new event is pitched as a cultural flagship for the North. The first headliner hasn’t been revealed yet, but the move signals a clear attempt to rebalance the UK’s festival map and tap into Leeds’ music legacy.
📊 Supporting Stats
The UK live music sector was worth ÂŁ5.9bn in 2023, with festivals contributing ÂŁ1.76bn (UK Music, This Is Music report, 2024).
BST Hyde Park itself drew over 500,000 attendees in 2024, with headline sets from the likes of Shania Twain, Kings of Leon and SZA (AEG Presents).
Leeds’ visitor economy is valued at £2.2bn annually, with major events contributing significantly to regional hospitality and tourism (Leeds City Council).
đź§ Decision: Does It Work?
Strategically, this looks like a smart expansion play. AEG knows how to scale a premium festival brand, and Roundhay Park’s history gives instant credibility. Leeds already has a thriving festival scene (Leeds Festival, Live at Leeds), but Roundhay positions itself differently: polished, heritage-driven, and designed to rival Hyde Park’s global pull.
Culturally, it answers a long-standing critique: that London dominates marquee music events. For fans across the north, this creates a new gravitational centre. Commercially, it opens fresh inventory for sponsors, hospitality, and brand activations in a less saturated but highly engaged market.
The risk? Overlap and fatigue. Leeds Festival already commands loyalty with a younger, rock/indie demographic. Roundhay will need to carve out its own identity - premium bookings, multigenerational draw, and an emphasis on production quality.
📌 Key Takeouts
What happened: AEG Presents is launching Roundhay Festival in Leeds, modelled on BST Hyde Park.
What works: Strong venue legacy, city partnership, premium positioning, and potential to decentralise the UK festival circuit.
Signals: Growing demand for regional cultural flagships, and proof that brands see opportunity in taking a “BST formula” outside London.
đź”® What We Can Expect Next
Expect the first headliner reveal to set the tone - if it’s global and multi-generational (think Madonna, Beyoncé, or Springsteen), Roundhay could instantly lock in credibility. If AEG nails the balance between superstar bookings and local integration, Roundhay Festival could become a long-term fixture that shifts how brands and artists view the North.
If it underdelivers on talent or becomes too similar to Leeds Festival, it risks being seen as a cash-grab. But if it succeeds, this could mark the beginning of “premium city festivals” beyond the capital - Manchester, Birmingham or Glasgow could be next in line.