Voodoo Village 2026: Last 100 Combi Tickets for a Queer‑Friendly Forest Weekend

The countdown is on: only 100 combi tickets are left for Voodoo Village 2026, the boutique electronic festival that turns a forest near Brussels into a three‑day playground of music, community and careful curation. If you’ve been hesitating, this is the moment. And if you want to know why this festival matters for Brussels’ queer and allied crowd, Ket has already followed its journey with several deep‑dives you can (re)read before jumping in.

A Forest Festival with a Soul

Voodoo Village isn’t a mega‑festival; it’s a boutique gathering set in the woods at Grimbergen, just outside Brussels. Over three days, the site becomes a labyrinth of stages, food corners, chill zones and art that feels closer to a curated world than a simple event.

In previous Ket coverage, we’ve highlighted how Voodoo Village balances international names and local favourites, often inviting Brussels‑based DJs and collectives that queer audiences already know from the city’s clubs and open‑airs. The festival’s ethos page – which you can explore via the organiser’s site – insists on values of care, sustainability and atmosphere, rather than chasing the biggest possible crowd.

Combi Tickets: What’s at Stake

Those last 100 combi tickets are your pass to the full experience:

  • access to all festival days instead of just one
  • freedom to wander between stages and moods as the weekend unfolds
  • time to settle into the forest environment, rather than rushing through a single evening

Voodoo Village has become one of those events where people don’t just come for a few names on a line‑up, but for the feeling of being in that specific place with that specific mix of people. For queers and allies, that often means: friends from different scenes, a crowd used to varied gender expressions and styles, and stages where house, techno, breaks and more experimental sounds coexist.

Why It Matters for Queer Brussels

Voodoo Village does not market itself as a “queer festival”, but for many LGBTQIA+ people in and around Brussels, it has become one of those weekends where they feel relatively safe to be expressive, to dress how they want and to move between groups without too much anxiety. That has to do with:

  • the size (big enough to feel like a real festival, small enough to still feel human)
  • the crowd, drawn from Brussels’ club, art and student scenes
  • the curation, which often includes artists and collectives who already operate in queer‑friendly environments

For readers who have followed Ket’s coverage of queer nights, open airs and festivals all year, Voodoo Village sits in that constellation of events where you can extend your summer beyond the city but still feel connected to its culture.

Practical Info

If you’ve been telling yourself all year that you’d finally give Voodoo Village a try, those last combi tickets are basically the forest calling your bluff.

KET Magazine is a community‑driven, non‑profit magazine run by volunteers and based in Brussels. You can find our other music and nightlife stories on ket.brussels, and you can always write to us to share your projects or pitch a story: info@ket.brussels

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