Gröna Lund opens April 25

On April 25 at 12:00, Gröna Lund opens for its 143rd season and this year, there’s an extra sense that something special awaits. From the moment you arrive, it’s clear: more experiences, more energy, and more reasons to stay a little longer.

For thrill-seekers, there are two new highlights to discover. Spindeln delivers bouncing, spinning, high-speed excitement that quickly gets your heart racing, while K-pop Bumpers adds a playful twist where bumper cars meet music and laughter.

At the heart of the park, you’ll also find K-street a colorful, temporary addition inspired by K-pop, available only during the 2026 season. Here, you can explore new flavors, try your hand at games, grab something quick to eat, and maybe even spin the prize wheel.

Food is very much part of the experience this year. The selection has expanded with everything from sushi burritos and Korean dishes to pizza slices and snacks that fit perfectly between rides.

As always, music plays a central role. With over 60 concerts throughout the season, featuring artists like Jack White, The Cardigans, and Thomas Stenström, there are plenty of evenings worth planning for.

For families, the beloved Gnuttarna return with new shows, disco events, and activities designed to give younger visitors their own memorable experience.

In short, whether you come for the rides, the food, the music, or simply the atmosphere, this is a season that invites you to come back, perhaps more than once.

Night of Culture – when the whole destination comes alive after dark

Kulturnatten (Night of Culture) is an annual, city-wide cultural event in Stockholm where museums, galleries, theatres, and cultural institutions open their doors to the public in the evening, often with free entry and special programmes. It is a night designed for discovery, where visitors can experience a wide range of cultural activities across the city in a single evening.

Djurgården has just experienced this year’s edition, Kulturnatten 2026, and once again it clearly demonstrated the strength of the destination as a connected cultural landscape. With experiences located close to each other, visitors were able to move easily between museums, exhibitions, and activities – making it possible to experience more than expected within just a few hours.

Several of Djurgården’s institutions offered special evening programmes, giving visitors a new way to experience familiar places. At Nordiska museet, for example, evening opening hours featured talks, music, and access to exhibitions in a different atmosphere than during the daytime.

A night of movement and discovery
One of the most visible effects of Kulturnatten was how naturally visitors moved between different venues. The short walking distances on Djurgården made it easy to combine several experiences in one evening – a museum visit, an exhibition, a performance, or a spontaneous stop along the way.

This is what makes Djurgården unique: you don’t have to choose – you can do more than you think in a very small area.

New visitors, new perspectives
Kulturnatten also acts as an entry point for many first-time visitors. The open and accessible format lowers barriers and encourages people to explore new places, often discovering parts of Djurgården they had not visited before.

Djurgården doesn’t end when the day does
The evening clearly showed that Djurgården is not only a daytime destination. When the sun sets and venues open their doors for evening programmes, a new dimension of the destination emerges – more atmospheric, more spontaneous, and even more diverse.

Why you should come back
Kulturnatten highlights something that becomes especially clear during this night:

Experiences are located close together

It is easy to combine multiple visits in one evening

Djurgården is just as alive at night as it is during the day

In short, Djurgården is a destination where you can fit more in – and where every visit can lead to the next discovery.