Culture Fix

Things to Do in Seattle

Ballard dishes seafood and West Seattle throws a street party.

By Taylor McKenzie Gerlach July 8, 2026

Seafood gets its big day in Ballard.

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 Food and Drink / Visual Arts / Live Music 
Performance / Film / Special Events / Readings and Lectures / On Sale Now


Seattleites are spoiled for choice when it comes to spending our leisure time. Just take a look at the sheer variety of options: We have an exceptional array of museums, independent bookstores, restaurants, bars (and bar trivia), record stores, nightlife options, local shops, and a rich music landscape.

And the actual landscape? Outdoor recreation opportunities abound, especially if you subscribe to the “no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothing” mindset (if you don’t, are you really from Seattle?). From abundant hikesswimming holes, state parks, and campgrounds just beyond city limits to a voluminous urban trail system, there’s something for the outdoorsperson of every skill and stoke level. Those with little ones (human or furred) can rejoice at a bevy of great playgrounds, spray parks, and zoos

But if you just want a guide already, we've got plenty for food, outdoors, shopping, and entertainment. Plus, a shortlist of what to do in Washington this month. Or find below the best things to do in Seattle, updated weekly. 


Food and Drink

Guest Chef Night at FareStart

through september 24, 5–9pm | farestart restaurant, $60

Seattle's renowned chefs rotate through guest spots at nonprofit FareStart, each bringing a tailored three-course menu. The dinners, from cooked by folks like José Garzón of Bad Chancla and Nathan Lockwood of Carrello and Altura, routinely sell out weeks before the tasting menus make it to the table. 

Farmers Market Chef Demos

july 10, 22, and 24, various | columbia city and phinney, free

Seattle's expanded roster of weekly neighborhood farmers markets is in full summer swing; coming up, Phinney plays host for Iranian-American cook the Caspian Chef and chef Hend Yahya leads demos in Columbia City and Phinney.

Ballard Music and Seafood Fest

july 10–12, various | ballard, free

The annual seafood returns to Ballard, touting a refreshed name that centers the festival's other big to-do: music. Much stays the same: local seafood vendors line NW Market Street, the beloved salmon barbecue dishes the alder-smoked fish, a beer garden sits opposite the main stage, and the lutefisk speed-eating contest continues its entertaining tradition.

Bite of Seattle

july 24–26, 11am–8pm | seattle center, free

The Seattle Center bash is a food-lover's dream. More than 100 food and drink vendors—selling everything from giant deep-fried squid to photo-worthy taiyaki—fill the walkways between live music stages. Outside of the food, Friday night brings family-friendly trivia and an on-theme screening of Wonka

Visual Arts

Exquisite Creatures

through august 31, various | Seattle Waterfront Maritime Building, $34

Stand face to face dozens of chameleons, compare wingspans with a Japanese spider crab, and peer at mandala-like compositions of everything from butterflies to birds. Using immaculately preserved specimens, artist Christopher Marley hosts a gallery show just across from the Seattle Ferry Terminal where creepy crawlies turn into works of art. 

Tanned and unfixed photography film is continually sensitive, lending a sense of transformation to Lotus L. Kang's new installation.

Lotus L. Kang: I hear the hollow boom of time

through september 27, various | frye art museum, free

Ethereal installations from Lotus L. Kang land at the free First Hill museum this summer. Poetic reflections on memory, translation, and inheritance take the form of huge floor-to-ceiling photography film sheets intentionally exposed to light. 

Samantha Yun Wall: What We Leave Behind

through october 4, various | seattle art museum, $29.99

Monochromatic paintings by Samantha Yun Wall are both haunting and captivating; their inspiration draws from a Korean folk tale of loss and familial ties, a flower motif weaving together the pieces that speak to stigmatization and taboo. 

Eric-Paul Riege: ojo|-|ólǫ́

through october 25, various | henry, free

Sculpture, textiles, collage, and video from Diné artist Eric-Paul Riege form the Henry's newest exhibition. Riege critically questions the idea of authenticity and role of institutions—like museums—and celebrates ancestral knowledge with an array of large-scale monochrome pieces. 
Some art is still in creation.

Image: Courtesy AMP

Seattle Art Fair

july 23–26, various | Lumen Field Event Center, $50.19–81.40

The celebration of modern and contemporary art turns 10 this year. Mini galleries fill the SoDo space with regional and local artwork as artists, curators, and collectors peruse; panels, artist-led discussions, and tours add depth. 

Live Music

The concert truck, where jingles are decidedly higher quality sound than an ice cream truck.

Seattle Chamber Music Society Concert Truck

through july 26, various | VARIOUS, FREE

Imagine an ice cream truck, but replace the looping jingle with intimate concerts from world-class pianists, violinists, and cellists. Chamber music comes to parks (Gasworks, Seward, Hing Hay) and outdoor venues (Seattle Chinese Garden, the Salish Steps, Washington Park Arboretum) with four engaging, family-friendly programs.

Jazz Happy Hour

July 10, 11, 17, 18, 24, 25, and 31, 4:30–6:30 | oxbow, free

It's brass month at Montlake's bustling bagel shop-turned-jazz club. Every Friday and Saturday afternoon in July, Oxbow serves up pizza slices and local jazz from artists like Naomi Moon Siegel and Jun Iida. 

Music stars in West Seattle, but kids activities and food selections are just as loud.

West Seattle Summer Fest

july 10–12, various | California avenue, free

Three days of nonstop local music—from noise rock of Zookraught to True Love's funk and soul—fills California Avenue, not to mention the requisite beer gardens, vendors, and merch booths. A dedicated kids zone hawks inflatables, arcade games, and soccer, in keeping with the theme of the summer. 

Performance

Birds of Play

july 9–25, 2 and 7pm | seattle public theater, $10–100

The circus is for the birds—in the most dazzling, creative, entertaining way. The returning cabaret show stars poultry and feathered friends in burlesque and acrobatic feats in Green Lake's historic theater. A family-friendly 2pm show drops the adult-eyes-only acts for more circus magic and silliness. 

14/48: The World's Quickest Theater Festival

july 10–11 and 17–18, 7:30 and 10pm | seattle center armory, $25–100

Fourteen plays written, cast, directed, rehearsed, scored, designed, and premiered in 48 hours sounds like sprinting a full marathon. Add random chance—directors randomly draw a script, written based on randomly selected themes from participants and audience members—and you have the chaotic, ever-surprising 14/48 Festival. 

FILM

Retro Night

July 8 and 15, 6 and 7pm | majestic bay theatre, $13.50

Ballard's adorable Majestic Bay Theatre pairs their iconic marquee and PNW-themed retro decor with classic films crowdsourced by social media. Up next, a veritable marathon of Lord of the Rings installments screen.

How to Train Your Dragon with Seattle Symphony

july 10–12, various | benaroya hall, $64.65–140.55

Hiccup and Toothless take flight in Benaroya Hall, accompanied by the thrilling, Oscar-nominated score played live by the Seattle Symphony. The concert music infuses new magic into the adorable adventure fantasy tale. 

Wonka

july 24, 9pm | mural amphitheater, free

The Timothée Chalamet-starring Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory prequel kicks off this summer's Movies at the Mural series. The free, all-ages screenings boast outdoor cinema on the lawn's 40-foot screen. BYO blanket or beach chairs, and come early to grab snacks from the nearby Bite of Seattle vendors. 

SPECIAL EVENTS

World Cup Games

through july 19, various | various, various

Seattle plays host to six FIFA World Cup matches at Lumen Field, but watch parties, celebrations, and themed specials go into play all across the state. For where to catch a game—or avoid crowds—in Seattle, check out our guide.

What makes a serial killer? A new exhibit at Pacific Place attempts an answer.

Mind of a Serial Killer

through august 31, various | pacific place, $28–37

Escape room meets true crime podcast in the newest immersive Fever exhibit to land in Seattle: psychology deep dives, recreated crime scenes, and a virtual reality forensic lab lend a peek into the minds of over 20 serial killers—including locals like the Green River Killer and Ted Bundy.

Rebels and Icons Member Curator Talk

july 12, 10:30am–1pm | mopop, $79 membership

In cahoots with the pop culture museum's new exhibition of Janette Beckman's photography, a members-only day digs deeper into her iconic artist portraits, street fashion photography, and activism. Hearing from the voice behind the museum's installation, exhibition lead Amalia Kozloff screens a short documentary, leads a discussion, and hosts a guided tour through the gallery. 

After Hours Premier: Pride Celebration

july 17, 7–10pm | seattle aquarium, $60.54

Nights at the Seattle Aquarium bring adults-only crowds to the touch tanks and towering animal habitats across all three buildings. For the July iteration, drag performances, dancing, and stories of the queerness of our oceans are in store. 

READINGS AND LECTUREs

Beyond Mysticism puts the PNW's art scene on display.

Beyond Mysticism Public Tour

july 11, 12, and 16, various | seattle art museum, admission

Class is in session among the newest SAM gallery, a gentle trek through the Pacific Northwest art and artists of the 20th century. Guided tours on Thursdays and weekends offer behind-the-scenes trivia and deeper dives into artwork crafted in our backyard.

The Lesbian Bar Chronicles

july 12, 5pm | wildrose, free

Part book release party, part community storytelling event, author Rachel Karp unveils her tome and its stories from 38 lesbian bars around the country. She's not the only one telling tales; anyone can contribute stories ahead of the Wildrose-hosted event.

Beach Naturalist Days

july 12–15, various | various, free

On days with particularly low tides, tide pool creatures come out to play, and expert naturalists from the Seattle Aquarium don boots and head down to the shoreline. From the Olympic Sculpture Garden Pocket Beach to Golden Gardens, naturalists station at six area beaches to help tide poolers identify finds, lend fun facts, and teach about keeping the shore's creatures safe.

Cabin: Off The Grid Adventures with a Clueless Craftsman

july 16, 6:30pm | seattle public library central library, free

Self-taught builder Patrick Hutchison visits the downtown Seattle Public Library to chat with KUOW Book Club host Katie Campbell. The duo will dig into Hutchinson's debut book, a staunchly local, comedy-infused memoir covering his unlikely journey into carpentry. 

On sale now

CatVideoFest 2026

august 7–9, various | siff uptown, $15

It's back, 70 minutes of pure feline greatness. SIFF screens the compilation, curated by indie film company Oscilloscope Laboratories, wherein funny, musically-talented, and downright cute cats get their moment on the big screen. 

Dinner, with a side of fresh air.

The Seasonal Table: Mezzanotte

august 26, 5:30pm | Rainier Beach Urban Farm and Wetlands, $175

Held beneath the tree canopy at the whimsical Rainier Beach Urban Farm, Tilth Alliance's final Seasonal Table meal of the summer is marshaled by Mezzanotte's Devon Capocelli. The en plein air family-style meals support the organization's mission towards a sustainable, equitable food future.

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