Quick answer: what do beginners need for their first festival?
The non-negotiable first festival kit: tent, sleeping bag (5°C comfort rating), sleeping mat, waterproof jacket, wellies, power bank (20,000mAh), head torch, photo ID, bank card, and wet wipes. Everything else is optional. Get these ten things right and your first festival will be comfortable regardless of weather. Get even two of them wrong and no amount of preparation elsewhere compensates.
Everyone’s first festival involves packing something completely unnecessary and forgetting something essential. This guide is written specifically to prevent the second half of that sentence. It covers exactly what you need, nothing more, and explains why each item matters for a beginner attending their first UK camping festival.
For the complete master packing list covering every scenario, see our ultimate festival packing list UK. For choosing which festival to attend first, see our best UK festivals for first timers guide.
The big ten — absolute essentials for first-timers
| # | Item | Why it’s non-negotiable | Get it |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tent | Your home for the weekend — must be waterproof | Amazon | Guide |
| 2 | Sleeping bag (5°C comfort) | UK festival nights get cold — wrong bag means no sleep | Amazon | Guide |
| 3 | Sleeping mat | Cold conducts up from ground — a bag alone is not enough | Amazon | Guide |
| 4 | Waterproof jacket (packaway) | UK weather is unpredictable — always have it accessible | Amazon | Guide |
| 5 | Wellies | Festival fields get muddy — trainers become unwearable | Amazon | Guide |
| 6 | Power bank (20,000mAh) | Dead phone = no cashless payment, no map, no meet-up | Amazon | Guide |
| 7 | Head torch | Navigating a dark muddy campsite at 2am without one is awful | Amazon |
| 8 | Photo ID | Required for bars — passport or driving licence | — |
| 9 | Bank card + cash backup | Most festivals cashless — card readers fail, cash saves you | — |
| 10 | Wet wipes (large pack) | Your shower substitute — use them morning and night | Amazon |
Shelter and sleep — getting this right changes everything
Quick answer: what tent and sleeping bag do beginners need?
For your first festival: a 2-person tent with a 2,000mm+ waterproof rating (you are sleeping solo but need the space for your gear), and a sleeping bag with 5°C comfort rating. The Quechua 2 Second Fresh&Black (~£70–£90) is the easiest first festival tent — pops up in 2 seconds, blackout lining for sleeping past sunrise, packs down into a circular bag. Any sleeping bag rated to 5°C covers UK summer festivals safely.
Shelter and sleep checklist
- ✅ Festival tent (2-person minimum, 2,000mm+ rated)
- ✅ Sleeping bag (5°C comfort rating or lower)
- ✅ Sleeping mat (self-inflating or foam)
- ✅ Sleeping bag liner (adds warmth, keeps bag clean)
- ✅ Travel pillow or stuff it with tomorrow’s clothes
- ✅ Extra tent pegs (budget tents have too few)
Clothing and layers — the beginner’s guide
Quick answer: how much clothing should I pack for a festival?
One outfit per day plus one spare, and twice as many socks as you think you need. The most common beginner mistake is massively over-packing clothes and under-packing practical items. A festival rucksack should leave room for your sleeping bag, tent (if needed), and day-use items. Prioritise layering pieces over single-use outfits. For the full clothing guide, see our what to wear to a festival UK guide.

Clothing checklist
- ✅ T-shirts (1 per day + 1 spare)
- ✅ Shorts (1–2 pairs — for warm days)
- ✅ Jeans or sturdy trousers (1–2 pairs)
- ✅ Packaway waterproof jacket — in day bag at all times
- ✅ Hoodie or fleece (evenings get cold)
- ✅ Thermal base layer (for cold nights — essential)
- ✅ Underwear (1 per day + 2 spare)
- ✅ Thick socks — more than you think (pack 2× daily count)
- ✅ Festival wellies
- ✅ Trainers or boots (for dry weather)
- ✅ Flip flops (for campsite shower blocks only)
- ✅ Hat (sun protection by day, warmth at night)
- ✅ Sunglasses
Power and communication
Quick answer: how do I keep my phone charged at a festival?
A 20,000mAh power bank gives 4–5 full smartphone charges — enough for a 3-day festival with careful use. For a 4–5 day event, pair it with a campsite charging point (paid lockers) or a second power bank. Download your festival’s site map and schedule offline before you go — this reduces data use and battery drain significantly. See our full best festival power banks UK guide.
- ✅ 20,000mAh power bank — fully charged before you leave home
- ✅ Charging cables (2–3 — they break and get lost)
- ✅ Head torch with red night mode
- ✅ Spare AAA batteries for head torch
Toiletries and hygiene — the beginner’s list
Quick answer: what toiletries do I need for a festival?
Festival toiletries are about managing the gap between proper showers. Wet wipes are the foundation — use them morning and night as a full-body substitute when shower queues are 45 minutes long. Dry shampoo extends hair hygiene across 3–4 days. Travel-size everything to save rucksack space. Leave anything you would be upset to lose at home.
- ✅ Wet wipes (large multipack — more than you think)
- ✅ Dry shampoo (Batiste 200ml — 2 cans for 4+ days)
- ✅ Travel toothbrush + toothpaste
- ✅ Deodorant (travel size or full — non-negotiable)
- ✅ Sunscreen SPF 50 (apply every day regardless of cloud)
- ✅ Lip balm with SPF
- ✅ Travel toilet roll (festival loos run out)
- ✅ Hand sanitiser (small, clip to bag)
- ✅ Period products if needed — pack twice what you expect
- ✅ Any prescription medication (plus repeat supply)
Food and drink
Quick answer: should I bring food to my first festival?
Yes — at least for campsite breakfasts and snacks. Festival food is expensive (£12–£15 for a main meal). A bag of instant porridge, protein bars, and a reusable water bottle saves you £30–£50 over a weekend. You do not need to cater all meals — just the ones where the alternative is paying £5 for a festival coffee at 8am.
- ✅ Instant porridge or cereal bars (cheap campsite breakfast)
- ✅ Snack bars (arena day bag essential)
- ✅ Reusable 1L water bottle (free refill points save £20+)
- ✅ Electrolyte sachets (for rehydration after alcohol)
Safety and money
- ✅ Photo ID (passport or driving licence — required for bars)
- ✅ 2 bank cards (in case one fails or is lost)
- ✅ £50–£100 cash backup (card readers fail)
- ✅ Anti-theft crossbody/bum bag worn across the front
- ✅ Basic first aid kit — paracetamol, ibuprofen, plasters, blister pads
- ✅ Emergency contact written on your wristband (not just in your phone)
- ✅ Festival app downloaded and site map saved offline
Beginner mistakes — and how to avoid them
Quick answer: what are the most common first festival mistakes?
(1) Not practising pitching the tent before the festival — arriving in the dark unable to pitch is miserable. (2) Wearing new, unbroken-in footwear — blisters on day 1 ruin the rest. (3) Packing white clothing — mud destroys it. (4) Forgetting the sleeping mat — cold from the ground defeats any sleeping bag. (5) Only bringing one phone charging cable — they break constantly at festivals.
| Mistake | The fix |
|---|---|
| Not practising tent pitch | Pitch it at home once before you go |
| New unbroken footwear | Wear your wellies and boots around the house for a week first |
| White or light clothing | Leave it at home — everything gets muddy |
| Forgetting the sleeping mat | Put it first on your list — cold ground defeats all sleeping bags |
| Only one charging cable | Pack 3 — they break, fall in puddles, get left in lockers |
| Packing a huge rucksack | Everything should fit in a 65L bag maximum — if it does not fit, you have over-packed |
| No physical meet point agreed | Agree a landmark meet point before phones die — not “the main stage” |
| Bringing expensive irreplaceable items | Leave watches, jewellery, and anything you would be devastated to lose at home |
Related guides
- 🎒 Ultimate Festival Packing List UK
- 📋 Festival Camping Checklist UK
- 🏆 Best UK Festivals for First Timers 2026
- 👗 What to Wear to a Festival UK
- 😴 How to Sleep at a Festival
Frequently asked questions
What do I need for my first festival UK?
The ten non-negotiables: tent, sleeping bag (5°C), sleeping mat, waterproof jacket, wellies, 20,000mAh power bank, head torch, photo ID, bank card + cash backup, and wet wipes. Get these right and your first festival will be comfortable whatever the weather.
How much does it cost to kit out for a first festival?
Budget approach: tent (~£40–£70), sleeping bag (~£30–£50), sleeping mat (~£10–£25), waterproof jacket (~£20–£40), wellies (~£15–£30), power bank (~£25–£40). Total kit-out: approximately £140–£255. All items reusable for future festivals.
What is the most forgotten festival item?
The sleeping mat. It is bulky, easy to leave behind, and the single item that most affects sleep quality. Cold conducts up from the ground through any sleeping bag without a mat between you and the earth. Do not leave without it.
How big a rucksack do I need for a festival?
60–80L for a car festival. 40–60L if travelling by public transport (you need to carry it further). Everything you need for a 4-day festival should fit in 65L alongside your sleeping bag and mat. If it does not, you have over-packed clothing.
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