Planning underway for Vancouver's one-night fireworks show this summer

Apr 28 2026, 10:39 pm

The beloved Honda Celebration of Light will not return in Summer 2026, after organizers of the long-running non-profit event announced in November 2025 that the three-night competition was facing a revenue shortfall that was too large to bear. The decision followed an anticipated budget deficit of nearly $1 million, driven by declining support from federal and provincial governments, as well as corporate sponsorship.

In its place, and as a one-year effort to maintain momentum while working to revive the full-scale event for Summer 2027, Vancouver City Council approved a motion in February 2026 put forward by Mayor Ken Sim to host a single-night replacement fireworks show this summer.

During a public meeting on Monday, commissioners with the Vancouver Park Board approved the City of Vancouver staff’s request to stage the event at English Bay Beach — the historic location of the Honda Celebration of Light — as it takes place on beaches and in parks under the board’s jurisdiction.

It was shared during the meeting that City staff have begun discussions and preliminary preparations for the one-night fireworks event, which will take place on a date to be determined later this summer. The mayor’s motion suggested a date in August, after the FIFA World Cup period.

This summer’s fireworks night will follow a similar template to the Honda Celebration of Light, but on a reduced scale, with fewer features, less complexity, and limited pre-fireworks programming. There will be no drone show, Inukshuk Lounge, large grandstand seating, or activations in Morton Park and nearby areas. However, the event will include some food trucks and a partial return of lounge programming at one location, with a modest lounge space offering liquor service for approximately 100 guests on the rooftop of the English Bay Bathhouse.

City staff also intend to contract BrandLive Group, which has produced every Honda Celebration of Light since taking over the production of the event in 2009, serving as the contractor of the non-profit Vancouver Fireworks Society. The Park Board will act as the event facilitator, with additional support from the City’s 2026 FIFA World Cup local organizing committee. BrandLive is also the City’s contractor for the five-week-long 2026 FIFA World Cup Fan Festival at Hastings Park.

Only Brennan Bastyovanszky, a commissioner with the Vancouver Liberals civic party and a previous fireworks judge for the 2024 event, voted against enabling the event, arguing that this scaled-down version would be a “hollowed-out experience” lacking the same vibe. Bastyovanszky suggested it would fall short because it is not a multi-night competition, has no overarching theme, and will feature fewer food trucks. He also accused the mayor of advancing this version of the event for “electioneering.”

ABC Vancouver commissioner Jas Virdi, however, emphasized the importance of a half-glass-full perspective to sustain the summertime fireworks tradition during a financially challenging year for the non-profit organization behind the Honda Celebration of Light, stating that “without this event [this year], it would just die” and that some non-ABC commissioners were also engaging in “electioneering” of their own by opposing it.

“This event is special in the fact that BrandLive is going to be working with the City to try to continue what the Honda Celebration of Light was,” continued Virdi, emphasizing that this is a free event that provides entertainment for the masses.

The event will cost up to $2 million, with $1.4 million coming from the municipal government’s already-budgeted investment into the three-night fireworks show prior to its cancellation — something the City provides to the event every year to cover policing, road closures, sanitation, and other logistical measures — and a one-time new additional contribution of up to $600,000.

Vancouver’s multi-night fireworks competition has been a mainstay in the city’s event calendar for over three decades, since its first year in 1990, growing into becoming British Columbia’s largest free annual public event. The 2009 event was briefly cancelled for a few weeks before it was revived with new corporate sponsors. The event has gone on every year except for the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021.

Each night of the fireworks attracts up to 500,000 people to the beaches and parks in and around English Bay, providing restaurants, bars, shops, entertainment establishments, hotels, and services with a major boost.

“We know from the previous Celebration of Light events that have existed for the past couple of decades that there’s a lot of traction and support for an appeal for both residents and visitors to the fireworks festival. It allows for building of community connections and civic pride,” said Park Board staff during the meeting.

“It helps to promote Vancouver as a destination for tourism. It supports our longer-term economic activity and enhances the city’s brand development.”

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