Experience the joy of Easter with community egg hunts, festive brunches, and inspiring services that celebrate renewal and hope. Bring your family and friends for a day filled with laughter and joy!
Anime Expo 2027 Day 4 — Sunday July 4 — closes out the world's largest anime convention on the US Independence Day holiday. Day 4 at AX is equal parts finale and final-day deal hunting: Artist Alley vendors reduce prices to clear inventory, exhibitors offload exclusive merchandise at discount, and the panels running Sunday reflect a more relaxed, community-focused energy than the announcement-driven earlier days.
The Sunday Closing Ceremonies are a beloved AX tradition — recap video of the weekend's cosplay, awards from the Masquerade, and the official close of another AX. This is the moment the community that's been together for four days formally marks the end and begins the year-long wait until next time.
Day 4 badges are typically the easiest AX badges to acquire on the resale market and the most underrated experience of the convention. The lines are shorter, the atmosphere is nostalgic, and the conversations on the floor are more genuine — less rushing between panels, more actually talking to the people around you.
AX 2027 Day 4 falls on July 4 — Independence Day fireworks are visible from parts of the LACC plaza area depending on which direction fireworks are launched. Metro and rideshare recommended; parking and traffic are particularly heavy on July 4 in downtown LA.
Sundays at Del Mar during the summer meet are built for the fan who is not already a racing regular — the format-friendly card, the lower-key atmosphere compared to Saturday, and the proximity to the Pacific Ocean make it one of the most accessible sports afternoons in San Diego County. A Sunday in August at Del Mar means arriving at 2pm, learning to read a basic racing form with help from the grandstand regulars who are always willing to explain, and watching eight or nine races before the sun moves west over the Pacific. Del Mar's Sunday crowds run younger than the weekday meet, and the energy reflects it: casual conversations about the horses, the occasional spectacular finish celebrated by the entire grandstand, and the walk back to the parking lot a genuinely complete afternoon.
Jul 26, 2026
From $50
San Diego Convention Center, 111 W…
San Diego Convention Center, July 26th. Sunday at Comic-Con International — from $50 for a badge on the final day, the day when the floor has been walked and the big Hall H panels have fired and the convention finds the version of itself that keeps people coming back year after year.
Sunday at SDCC is the day the cosplay is at full intensity because it's the last chance. The Exhibit Hall has deals that didn't exist Thursday — publishers moving stock, creators selling what's left of their limited prints. The energy is exhausted and alive at the same time: four days of maximum input produces a loose, generous, overstimulated crowd that is genuinely fun to be inside. The announcements have already happened; what's left is the experience. The Convention Center floor in late July with the harbor visible through the glass and fifty thousand people who flew in from everywhere — nothing replicates it. Badges at this level don't linger. If Sunday is your entry point into SDCC, take it. It is a real day.
WonderCon 2027 closes on Sunday March 28 with the convention's final-day tradition: reduced crowds, Artist Alley price reductions on remaining inventory, exhibit floor deals, and the specific warmth that closes every fan convention when the community acknowledges the shared experience is ending for another year.
Sunday at WonderCon is consistently the most undervalued badge of the weekend — available more easily than Friday or Saturday, more affordable on the secondary market, and delivering an experience that longtime convention attendees describe as the most genuinely enjoyable day. The urgency is gone, the competition for panels is reduced, and what remains is the convention as a social space rather than a logistics problem.
Sunday programming includes closing panels and the announcement of WonderCon 2028 dates — a moment that gives the community immediate forward-looking anticipation to close the current convention. The exhibit floor's end-of-convention deals are real: publishers discount remaining stock, artists reduce prices on prints, and vendors offer bundles that weren't available on Friday.
The Anaheim Convention Center is at 800 W Katella Ave. Metro and rideshare recommended on Sunday as parking lot traffic at convention close is predictably heavy. Single-day Sunday badges are typically the most available of the three-day run. Badge holders from Friday or Saturday can also purchase Sunday add-ons through the WonderCon website if the full weekend was not initially purchased.
Coachella 2027 Weekend 1 — Sunday April 11 — closes the festival's first weekend with the Sunday headliner, traditionally the act who provides the emotional conclusion to the three-day experience. Sunday at Coachella has produced some of the festival's most celebrated performances in its 25+ year history: Beyoncé's Homecoming (2018), Kanye West's Sunday Service (2019), and other moments where the Sunday closing set transcended the festival context to become cultural events in their own right.
Sunday afternoon before the headliner belongs to the crowd-watching and reflecting energy that comes at the end of a three-day festival: people are tired, sunburned, and in the specific emotional state of an experience that's ending. The afternoon sets on Gobi and Sonora attract the most devoted audiences because there are no competing obligations — Sunday afternoon Coachella is just music.
The Sunday headliner's set begins late (typically 11 PM - 12 AM) and concludes with the festival grounds emptying onto the access roads in a massive simultaneous exodus. The post-Coachella Sunday night drive through the desert back toward Los Angeles is part of the experience for campers and hotel guests alike.
The Empire Polo Club is at 81800 Avenue 51 in Indio. Weekend 1 camping access runs through Sunday night. Return transportation from Indio to the Los Angeles area is heaviest Sunday night — plan for extended drive times or leave before the headliner set if early return is necessary.
Coachella 2027 Weekend 2 — Sunday April 18 — is the final day of the entire 2027 Coachella festival, and carries the energy of a genuine ending. The Sunday headliner is playing the last main stage set of the festival run; after the final notes of the encore, the Empire Polo Club begins its transformation back to its ordinary existence as a polo ground in the Colorado Desert.
Weekend 2 Sunday has a specific character among experienced Coachella attendees: it's the day for staying close to the main stage all afternoon, for finding the Sunday afternoon sets that aren't competing with anything on other stages, and for the intentional slowness that comes from knowing this is the last day of something that won't happen again for another year.
The campground on Weekend 2 Sunday empties throughout the day as those who don't have evening plans break down their setups and begin the return journey. The parking lots and access roads build toward the familiar post-Coachella Sunday night traffic that stretches from Indio to the 10 freeway.
The Empire Polo Club at 81800 Avenue 51 in Indio. Weekend 2 camping access concludes after Sunday. All stages run through the Sunday headliner set with the festival close following. The desert drive toward Los Angeles along I-10 is its own ritual — the end of Coachella in the rearview mirror and the city ahead.
San Diego Comic-Con 2027 Sunday — July 25 — closes the most important pop culture convention in the world with a combination of final-day deals, community ritual, and the closing ceremony that marks the formal end of another SDCC.
Sunday at SDCC has a specific character that badge veterans understand deeply: the exhibit floor vendors begin reducing exclusive merchandise prices by midday to avoid shipping it home, Artist Alley artists sell remaining prints at reduced rates, and the convention takes on an atmosphere of collective melancholy-nostalgia that is, paradoxically, one of the best feelings the event produces. The community has been together for four days. Sunday is when it acknowledges that it's ending.
The Sunday programming schedule is lighter than Friday or Saturday — which means programming rooms that were standing-room-only on Saturday are accessible on Sunday for the same content from smaller guests. Sunday is the day to see the panels you missed because Hall H consumed your morning on Friday.
The SDCC Sunday badge is often the most available badge in the registration system and the most overlooked. The experience of SDCC Sunday — floor deals, lighter crowds, genuine community warmth — is a complete and distinct event on its own terms. Trolley service runs to the convention center throughout Sunday.