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West London prepares to welcome over 50,000 parade performers this weekend as almost two million people descend on the technicolour roads of Notting Hill for London’s largest street party. Notting Hill Carnival is just days away, returning bigger and better than ever for 2024’s exuberant festivities. The community-led celebration of history and Caribbean culture started in 1966 and the iconic parade champions a procession of dancing to soca and calypso music.

Three days of live stages with a lineup of steel and mas bands, elaborate floats and dozens of sound systems greet carnival attendees sparkling in prints, patterns and neon brights. Sunday’s family day draws crowds of excited children while Monday’s adult parade puts on the ultimate show – both events are free to attend. Food stalls pepper the route with offerings of fiercely flavoured Jamaican jerk chicken and Trinidadian roti and pre and post-carnival parties keep the good vibes going well into the night.



Here’s our guide to the Notting Hill festivities including where to go, how to get there and where to stay. Read more on London travel : Notting Hill Carnival 2024 spans the August bank holiday weekend from Saturday 24 to Monday 26 August and most of the celebrations are free for anyone to attend. Saturday is the Panorama Steel band competition, a national contest to crown the best at making the sweet sound of the pan.

From 4-11pm at Emslie Horniman’s Pleasance Park, W10 3DH, tickets £20pp. J’Ouvert – a traditional celebration to ring in the carnival with colourful paints and powders before sunrise – has been cancelled for 2024. The carnival opening ceremony officially kicks off at 10am on Sunday at MAS Judging Point on Great Western Road.

Sunday is “family day” with a children’s parade dancing the streets, Dutty Mas – a mayhem of brightly coloured paints or even melted ‘chocolate’ – and live sound systems of reggae and house music. Sound systems from 12-7pm at Emslie Horniman’s Pleasance Park and Powis Square, W11 2AY. Adults Day is on bank holiday Monday from 10.

30am, when the traditional parade and intense carnival party kicks off. Ticketed after-parties continue the festivities late into the night. Sound systems from 12-7pm at Emslie Horniman’s Pleasance Park and Powis Square, W11 2AY.

Follow the crowds through Notting Hill and Kensington’s W10 and W11. The three-and-a-half-mile route across west London starts near Westbourne Park tube station down Chepstow Road to Westbourne Grove and then up to Ladbroke Grove, looping down Kensal Road back to Westbourne Park. You can track the parade’s progress on the official map .

The closest underground stations within walking distance of the popular route are: TfL has advised several roads will be closed in Notting Hill so buses and taxis will not be able to take you to the heart of the action and there is no Night Tube or Overground on Sunday 25 August. Ladbroke Grove Tube station will be closed on both days. Here are the best hotels to stay in for a prime position near the carnival: Located by Paddington station within walking distance of Notting Hill, this hotel is as stylish as it is welcoming, with wood-panelled rooms and a relaxed vibe ideal for winding down after dancing the day away in the carnival’s parade.

A buzzy bar with an extensive cocktail menu to carry on the party, comfortable rooms and a spacious spa form K West Hotel in Shepherd’s Bush, just a 25-minute stroll from the festivities at Notting Hill. This chic hotel in South Kensington is a stone's throw from Hyde Park and an upmarket option for carnival dwellers looking to stay away from the vibrant centre of the lively weekend. Read more: The best hotels in London: Where to stay in the capital.

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