Personal Stories

Fib Music Festival Review & Why You Should Go

by Mia M.

The first time someone mentioned the Festival Internacional de Benicàssim to me, I nodded politely and assumed it was just another overhyped European event. Then a friend came back with photos — stage lights blazing over mountains, a beach at midnight, a sunset that looked fake — and I was booked within the week. This Fib Music Festival review is the honest, practical guide I wish I'd had before going. Find more posts on travel and personal adventures in the personal section of this blog.

Festival Internacional de Benicàssim — FIB — is a four-day outdoor music event on Spain's eastern coast, just north of Valencia. It brings together big headliners, cult indie acts, and a genuinely international crowd, all within walking distance of a Mediterranean beach. The music is the backbone, but the full experience — the weather, the setting, the people — is what makes it unforgettable.

If you've braved a UK festival and spent three days soaked through and queuing in mud, FIB is the complete opposite. I've written about Download Festival at Donnington before, and the contrast couldn't be more stark. FIB runs at a slower, warmer, more human pace. Here's what you actually need to know before you go.

Making FIB a Festival You Keep Coming Back To

Most people treat FIB as a one-off holiday. The ones who get the most out of it treat it as a regular fixture. Approaching it as a recurring trip — rather than a single spontaneous decision — completely transforms what you get from it. You arrive knowing the layout, the shortcuts, the best spots. And you've already built a loose community of people you'll see again next time.

Why Repeat Visits Pay Off

First-timers spend their energy on logistics. Return visitors spend that same energy on actually enjoying themselves. Here's what shifts by your second or third time:

  • You head straight to the campsites with the best shade and airflow — no trial and error
  • You know the exact viewing spots at each stage that avoid the worst of the crush
  • You've built a loose community of regulars — the social element genuinely grows each year
  • You understand the food and drink layout, so you're never trapped in a queue at the wrong moment
  • Early-bird ticket rounds are announced well before lineups drop; repeat attendees know to buy without waiting for names

How to Plan Early and Save Money

The biggest mistake FIB first-timers make isn't at the festival — it's in the months before. Flights to Valencia and accommodation near the site both spike hard the closer you leave it.

  • Book flights at least three months in advance — budget airlines run regular routes from most major UK airports straight into Valencia
  • Lock in accommodation before the lineup is announced; prices jump the moment names are confirmed
  • Build a proper trip budget and track your spending in the months leading up — I use a bullet journal for exactly this kind of planning, and this post on bullet journal goal-setting will give you a system that actually works
  • Research the surrounding area around Benicàssim — the town and coastline are worth exploring if you add a few days around the festival itself

FIB vs. Other European Festivals: A Straight Comparison

You've got real options for European summer festivals. FIB is excellent — but it's not for everyone, and it helps to know how it sits against the alternatives before you commit your money and annual leave to it.

Festival Country Weather Beach Access Lineup Focus General Vibe
FIB (Benicàssim) Spain Hot, reliable sun Yes — 5 min walk Indie, alt-rock, pop Relaxed, international
Glastonbury UK Unpredictable No All genres Chaotic, iconic
Primavera Sound Spain Warm Nearby Indie, experimental Urban, curated
Rock Werchter Belgium Variable No Rock, pop, electronic High-energy, large
Roskilde Denmark Cool to mild No Broad, eclectic Community-focused

On weather and setting, nothing else compares. If guaranteed sunshine and an actual beach within walking distance are priorities for you — and they absolutely should be — FIB sits in a category of its own. The other festivals on this list are great. FIB is a holiday that also happens to have a brilliant lineup.

Image Result For Fib 2017 Lineup
Image Result For Fib 2017 Lineup

Solving the Most Common Problems at FIB

FIB is well-run for its size, but problems still happen — especially for first-timers who haven't accounted for the climate or the scale. Most of these are completely avoidable with a little prep.

Heat, Crowds, and Logistics

The heat and crowd flow between stages are the two things that catch newcomers off guard most consistently. Both are manageable once you know what you're dealing with.

  • Drink water constantly, not just when you feel thirsty — free water stations are placed throughout the site; use them obsessively
  • Carry a small hand fan or battery-powered mini fan for afternoon sets — sounds trivial until you're standing in 33-degree heat for two hours
  • Move between stages 15 minutes before you need to; crowd density peaks sharply at every set changeover
  • Download the festival app and site map before arrival, and save everything offline — mobile data becomes unreliable when tens of thousands of people are on the same network
  • Wear light breathable clothing and a wide-brimmed hat during daylight hours without exception

When Things Go Really Wrong

Lost your group? Phone flat? Something more serious? FIB has a well-staffed information tent and a medical point — both are your immediate first stops for anything beyond minor inconvenience.

  • Agree on a physical meeting point with your group before you separate — somewhere unambiguous, like the main stage entrance or a specific food stand
  • Share your campsite row number and tent description at the start of each day, not just your phone number
  • A large-capacity portable charger is non-negotiable across four days; one small one won't be enough
  • Write the festival emergency contact number on paper and keep it in your bag — not just in your phone

Pro tip: Screenshot the full site map and save it to your camera roll before you leave your accommodation — mobile data at large festivals disappears fast, and offline access to the layout has rescued many a frantic hour of wandering.

Mistakes That Will Hurt Your FIB Experience

These are the patterns I've watched play out with first-timers, reliably, every single time. Avoid these and your trip immediately improves.

  • Skipping sunscreen and planning to buy it on-site — it's sold at inflated prices and often runs out; pack your own high-SPF supply and assume you'll need twice as much as you think
  • Booking accommodation far away to cut costs — getting back at 4am when transport is chaos costs far more in stress and lost sleep than the savings were ever worth
  • Wearing the wrong footwear — sandals for the beach, trainers for the festival ground; standing on a dusty floor for eight hours in flip flops is a fast route to a miserable evening
  • Only watching headliners — some of the best-remembered sets at any given FIB come from artists halfway down the bill who nobody arrived planning to see
  • Over-packing your campsite setup — a full air mattress and portable kitchen sounds appealing until you're assembling it in 35-degree heat past midnight
  • Underestimating how heat affects alcohol — it hits harder and faster; pace yourself from day one rather than learning this lesson on day three
  • Assuming everywhere takes cards — many stalls are cash-only, and ATMs near festival sites deplete quickly during peak times

What a Real FIB Day Actually Looks Like

People picture a music festival as non-stop chaos from morning to midnight. FIB is intentionally not that — and once you accept the pace, you'll love it.

Daytime: Slow Mornings and Beach Hours

The main acts don't start until late afternoon, which gives your mornings a genuinely relaxed character. This isn't dead time — it's recovery time, and the festival is designed around it.

  • Wake up when your body decides — there's no schedule to keep before noon
  • Walk to the beach — it's a five-minute stroll from the site — and spend a few hours in the sea properly recovering
  • Grab breakfast from local bakeries in town or market stalls near the campsite entrance
  • Head back to camp, use the festival shower facilities, and plan which sets you're prioritising that evening
  • First acts typically kick off late afternoon — treat everything before that as genuine leisure, not wasted time

Evening and Late Night: When FIB Comes Alive

The evening is when FIB earns its reputation. Acts run well past midnight, the temperature becomes perfect, and the energy builds from a slow simmer into something that's genuinely hard to describe until you've felt it.

  • The sunset slot is unmissable — live music against a Mediterranean sunset with mountains framing the stage is one of those moments that resets your idea of what a good experience feels like
  • Main acts regularly finish well after midnight, with smaller stages continuing after that
  • After the final headline set, the beach — with music drifting over from the site — is its own experience worth staying up for
  • Get food and drinks before the 9pm crowd peak; once the main stage fills, queue times can triple

What Most Fib Music Festival Reviews Get Wrong

There's a consistent set of myths about FIB that circulate in every Fib Music Festival review forum thread and group chat. Here's what's actually true.

Myth: FIB is only for indie music fans.
The lineup consistently crosses into alternative rock, pop, and electronic. You don't need niche taste to enjoy it — and you'll likely discover artists outside your usual preferences without even trying.

Myth: The camping is rough and miserable.
Compared to most UK festivals, FIB's camping is well-organised. There are showers, clean toilets, and the campsite is lit at night. It's not a luxury hotel, but it's not a survival experience either.

Myth: You need to speak Spanish.
English is widely understood across the festival site and in the local tourist area. A few basic phrases help socially, but you won't struggle without them.

Myth: The heat makes it unenjoyable.
Daytime heat is intense — that's real. But the festival is built around it: shaded areas, free water stations throughout, and a beach that functions as a natural reset button. By evening, conditions are close to ideal.

Myth: You should only go if you recognise the headliners.
This is the most damaging one. Go in open-minded and you'll walk away with artists you'd never heard of before sitting at the top of your streaming playlists. That's the actual value of a well-curated festival.

Insider Tips to Maximise Your FIB Experience

What to Bring

Your packing list matters more at FIB than at almost any other festival because the heat introduces variables most UK campers simply aren't used to managing.

  • Factor 50 sunscreen — far more than you think, and reapply constantly through the afternoon
  • Lightweight layers for the coast's late-night chill — the temperature drops more than you expect once the sun goes down
  • A refillable water bottle — free water stations are everywhere; there's no excuse for not using them
  • Comfortable trainers for festival ground plus sandals for beach and campsite movement
  • A crossbody bag or belt bag — keeps valuables secure in crowds without the bulk of a backpack
  • Cash in euros — plenty of stalls don't take cards
  • Large-capacity power bank and all your charging cables
  • Earplugs for sleeping — your neighbours won't be quiet at 6am, and you'll want to function the next day

FIB's international crowd is genuinely stylish, and the warm weather makes putting a good look together easy and fun. If you want outfit inspiration before you start packing, this current fashion inspiration and style wishlist post is a great starting point for building something that works in the heat without sacrificing personality.

Making the Most of the Social Side

FIB is as much about people as it is about the lineup. The crowd is international, open, and more conversational than most festivals I've attended.

  • Don't guard your spot at the front obsessively — the connections you make standing in a crowd often become the best memory of the whole trip
  • Use your mornings to actually explore the town of Benicàssim — it's genuinely charming and almost entirely overlooked by festival visitors who stay on-site
  • Join FIB community groups before you go; they're the fastest way to get real transport advice, find travel companions, and avoid the mistakes regulars already made
  • Put your phone away for at least one full set per day — the best FIB moments don't translate to a screen; you have to be fully present to actually feel them

Final Thoughts

If you're still undecided about whether FIB is worth the trip, stop deliberating and book the tickets. Get your flights sorted early, lock in accommodation before the lineup drops, pack for the heat rather than your usual festival, and arrive with an open mindset — that's genuinely the whole formula. FIB is the kind of experience that stays with you long after you've shaken the last of the dust out of your bag, and once you've been, you'll already be thinking about when you're going back.

Mia M.

About Mia M.

Mia M. runs Beautiful Inspiring Creative Life, a personal blog covering DIY projects, bullet journaling, stationery, fashion finds, and interior inspiration. Her writing takes a creative-life-documentation approach — sharing the small aesthetic pleasures and practical projects that make daily life feel more intentional. Topics span hand-lettering and planner spreads, DIY room makeovers, thrift flips, affordable fashion, and honest reviews of the notebooks, pens, and craft supplies she actually uses. The blog began as a personal journaling project and grew into a creative-lifestyle space for readers building their own aesthetic routines, with posts that balance inspiration with the real-world budgets and time constraints of everyday hobbyists.

Check out the FREE Gifts. Or latest free DIY eBooks from our best compilation.

Turn off Ad Block to reveal all the secrets. Once done, hit any button: