Tomorrow· Jun 27 – Jun 28
Heritage Square Museum, 3510 Pasad…
Magic Market's Summer Solstice is a witchy, whimsical two-day outdoor marketplace at the stunning Heritage Square Museum in Los Angeles, a collection of preserved Victorian-era homes that provides one of the most atmospheric event settings in the city. More than 100 curated vendors fill the grounds, selling crystals, metaphysical supplies, tarot cards, hand-poured candles, oracle decks, vintage clothing, handmade art, botanical skincare, and mystical home goods.
Beyond shopping, the event includes on-site tarot card readings, reiki sessions, aura photography, sound baths, live acoustic and folk music performances, and vegan food vendors. Guided tours of the historic Victorian homes run throughout the weekend, giving attendees access to one of LA's most unique architectural collections.
General admission is $15 for the weekend. A Witch's Pass at $45 includes priority entry, exclusive vendor discounts, and access to the curated backstage experience. Saturday and Sunday, 1pm to 6pm. Heritage Square is accessible via Metro and Pasadena Avenue. A convergence point for LA's metaphysical and alternative creative communities.
In 10 days· Jul 6
Free
Spreckels Organ Pavilion, 2211 Pan…
They believed the Spreckels Organ deserved to hear from the best players in the world, not just the best available locally. Every summer for decades, the International Summer Organ Festival has answered that belief by bringing virtuosos from across the United States and abroad to perform Monday evening concerts at the Pavilion.
The Monday series is distinct from the Sunday afternoon concerts. It runs longer, draws a more focused audience, and features soloists who have built careers around the instrument. The programs change weekly — each visiting organist chooses their own — which means returning more than once gives you a genuinely different experience. An instrument this complex and this rare rewards an audience willing to sit with it more than once.
The outdoor setting in Balboa Park at dusk is a venue unto itself. The marine layer has usually burned off by evening, and the amphitheater-style seating faces the organ facade while the park goes quiet behind you. Bring something to sit on and stay for the full program. The Organ Pavilion is one of the better concert venues in San Diego in summer, free, and most people who live here have never been.
Free. No tickets. Monday evenings 7:30–9 PM, July through early September. Spreckels Organ Pavilion, 2211 Pan American Rd E, Balboa Park, San Diego.
The Japanese summer festival comes to the heart of Rowland Heights. STC Rowland Legacy transforms into a matsuri for three days in July 2026: takoyaki, yakitori, wagyu skewers, matcha soft-serve, and a vendor alley where everything is worth slowing down for. The OCLA Night Market Natsu Festival runs July 10 through 12. Free admission.
This is not a themed experience staged for outsiders. The SGV Japanese-American community has roots here that go back generations. The Natsu Festival is the annual moment when those roots surface publicly in food, cosplay competition, live entertainment, and the density of people who come back every year because it feels like home.
The cosplay competition draws the anime fan community from across the region. The food vendor rows serve the neighborhood. Both groups share the same space, producing the cross-pollination that makes SGV events distinct: cultural authenticity and fandom culture occupying the same parking lot.
Rowland Heights is the kind of place where you find something you did not know you were looking for. The Natsu Festival is that feeling in summer form.
Friday July 10 (5-11pm) Saturday July 11 (3-11pm) Sunday July 12 (3-9pm). STC Rowland Legacy, 18991 Colima Road, Rowland Heights CA 91748.
In 14 days· Jul 10
Free
Point Loma Park, 1049 Catalina Blv…
They believed a neighborhood could sustain its music programs if it came together at the park every Friday evening. Twenty-six years later, the Point Loma Summer Concert Series is still going — a 501(c)(3) nonprofit whose ticket and sponsorship revenue funds music education in Point Loma schools.
The series runs five consecutive Fridays from July 10 through August 7 at Point Loma Park on Catalina Boulevard. Each evening features two sets: a junior stage opening at 5:30 PM and a main stage at 6:30 PM. The lineup changes every week — cover acts, tribute bands, local originals — and the crowd ranges from parents with strollers to longtime residents who haven't missed a summer in a decade.
The experience is deliberately low-key. Lawn chairs and blankets encouraged. Food and drink available nearby. No tickets required at the gate — it's free to attend, though donations support the schools program.
What makes it worth seeking out isn't the production scale. It's the fact that it still happens here, in this neighborhood, because the neighborhood decided it should.
Every Friday July 10–August 7. Point Loma Park, 1049 Catalina Blvd.
In 14 days· Jul 10
501 N Main St, Los Angeles, CA 900…
The Summer of Salsa has been drawing West Coast Latin music devotees to LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes for years. On July 10, La Verdad -- the premier West Coast Latin ensemble led by Gabriel Gonzalez -- takes the outdoor stage for a 7-11 p.m. set at 501 N Main St in downtown Los Angeles.
Before the performance, Dancing 101 with Roberto offers a free beginner salsa lesson at 6 p.m. -- the kind of session where newcomers end up moving next to veterans by the end of the night, no hierarchy. Super DJ Robby opens and bridges the sets. Latin Gold Records curates a vinyl collection for the evening.
This is not a concert you watch from a distance. The entire courtyard is a dance floor, the crowd spans first-timers to regulars who have been coming to this series for years, and the Plaza's open-air setting puts the city behind the stage. Free with RSVP. Food and beverages available for purchase on-site.
In 14 days· Jul 10
✨ New
Trolley Barn Park, Adams Ave & Flo…
Every Friday evening from June through August, Trolley Barn Park in University Heights fills with neighbors, blankets, and live music. The University Heights Summer in the Park concert series is one of San Diego longest-running free community events — a weekly ritual that turns a small neighborhood park into an outdoor living room. The format is simple: local bands play, families spread out on the grass, kids run around until dark, and the taco truck at the corner does its best night of the week. There is no admission, no VIP section, no lineup announcement three months early. You show up, you sit down, you listen. The music ranges from jazz to rock to Latin to whatever the booking committee felt like that week. The park sits at the top of the hill where Park Boulevard meets Adams Avenue, which means the view behind the stage is the canyon and the sunset. Concerts start at 6 PM and run until dark. Bring a chair, bring a cooler, bring the dog. This is the kind of event that makes a neighborhood feel like a neighborhood.
Jul 11 – Jul 12, 2026
1201 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles, C…
The International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation believes the mat is a meritocracy — and this tournament is where that belief becomes observable.
The IBJJF Los Angeles Summer International Open brings hundreds of competitors from across Southern California and beyond to the Los Angeles Convention Center for two days of sanctioned gi competition. Divisions span all belt levels, ages, and weight classes. On any given Saturday, the competitor who trained in a Fontana garage is rolling against someone from one of the most decorated academies in West Hollywood. The belt is the only credential that matters once the timer starts.
Spectators enter free. There is no badge required, no pre-registration. You walk into South Hall J and find a mat. The room sounds like a gym — quiet focused intensity interrupted by the tap of a submission — and then the next match begins.
If you have trained for any amount of time and want to understand what competitive BJJ looks like when it's taken seriously, this is the room that shows you. The competitors know exactly where they stand in their weight class. Everyone in the building knows exactly why they're there.
Held July 11–12, 2026. Los Angeles Convention Center, South Hall J, 1201 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles, CA 90015. Free spectator admission. Athlete registration through IBJJF. Parking $30.
Jul 11, 2026
Free
200 N Grand Ave, Los Angeles, CA 9…
Grand Park runs twelve acres from City Hall to the Music Center in the center of downtown Los Angeles. On summer evenings, the park hosts free outdoor movies on a screen that requires no membership, no blanket application, no reservation. You show up.
The audience is downtown Los Angeles in cross-section: workers who stayed late and found a reason to stay later, people who walked over from Pershing Square, families from Boyle Heights and Chinatown and Echo Park who treat Grand Park as a weekend destination, tourists who didn't know this existed.
Grand Park runs community events, free concerts, and cultural programming through summer and fall — summer movies, fitness events, cultural celebrations, and the kind of public programming that cities claim to want and rarely sustain. Grand Park has sustained it for over a decade.
200 N Grand Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90012. Free. Adjacent to Metro Red and Purple Lines at Civic Center. grandparkla.org for 2026 schedule.
Happening Now
The Griffith Park Disc Golf Summer Series runs informal and PDGA-sanctioned competitive rounds on the Griffith Park Disc Golf Course throughout the summer months, one of the most scenically situated disc golf venues in California. The course runs through the hills of Griffith Park with views toward downtown Los Angeles, the Hollywood Sign, and the surrounding Santa Monica Mountains.
The Griffith Park disc golf course is a 9-hole layout on the Ranger Station side of the park with varying terrain, tree-lined fairways, and elevation changes that make it considerably more challenging than flat-ground courses. The summer series draws the consistent Griffith Park playing community — regulars who play the course multiple times per week throughout the season — alongside competitors from the broader LA disc golf circuit.
The series format varies by event: some rounds are casual group play with scorecards, others are PDGA-sanctioned B or C-tier events with formal registration and rating implications. The series coordinator posts specific formats and dates through the Los Angeles Disc Golf Club social channels.
Griffith Park's disc golf course is accessible from Griffith Park's east entrance on Riverside Drive. Parking in the surrounding Griffith Park lots. The course is free to play outside of tournament registration fees for sanctioned events. All skill levels welcome for casual rounds; competitive rounds have entry fees and division structures.