
May sits in a sweet spot that a lot of Smoky Mountains visitors overlook. School is still in session for most of the month, summer crowds have not arrived, the national park is fully open and green, and the event calendar is legitimately packed. If you have been thinking about a spring trip to Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, or Sevierville, May 2026 gives you more reasons to book than almost any other month of the year.
Here is what is happening near Smoky Ridge Getaways in May 2026 and a few things only the locals tend to know about.
All of May 2026 · Dollywood, Pigeon Forge
Dollywood’s spring festival runs through the entire month and it is one of the most visually impressive things in the region during May. Over 500,000 fresh blooms fill the park, live music runs daily across multiple stages, and the food tasting passport lets you work through dozens of seasonal dishes and drinks from vendors throughout the park. Weekday visits are significantly less crowded than weekends and the flower displays are just as good on a Tuesday morning as they are on a Saturday afternoon.
Planning tips:
May 13 to 16, 2026 · LeConte Center, 2986 Teaster Lane, Pigeon Forge · $5 admission, kids free
The 39th annual Smoky Mountain Toy and Pedal Car Show is one of the most unique events in the entire region and one of the most underreported. Over 275 vendor spaces, indoor and outdoor, packed with pre-1970 pedal cars, pressed steel toys, antique advertising signs, vintage bicycles, and ride-on toys. Serious collectors travel from across the country for this one. A Saturday morning auction closes out the show. We wrote a full post on this event here if you want the full breakdown.

May 15 and 16, 2026 · Historic Downtown Sevierville · Free admission
The Bush’s Best Tennessee State Championship BBQ Cook Off, three stages of live music all weekend, the Mountain Soul Vocal Competition honoring Dolly Parton, the inaugural Burning Off the BBQ 5K on Saturday morning, and a Late Night Jam Friday night led by five-time world champion banjo picker Gary “Biscuit” Davis. All of it free. Downtown Sevierville is 27 minutes from Flashy Splashy Lodge and 19 minutes from Views From The Mountain Top. We covered this one in depth here.

May 16 and 17, 2026 · Greater Smokies Event Grounds, 7930 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy, Townsend · $15 to $35 per day
Tennessee’s oldest Scottish festival celebrates its 44th year in Townsend, just outside the Great Smoky Mountains National Park entrance. Highland athletics including the caber toss and stone put, pipes and drums, Highland and Irish dance, Celtic folk and rock music, whisky tastings, and food from the Scottish, Irish, and British traditions. New for 2026 is the ScotDance USA Southeast Regional Highland Dance Championships, with the winner advancing to nationals. This is one of the most authentically cultural events in the entire Smoky Mountains calendar and it happens on the peaceful side of the mountains where the pace is completely different from the Pigeon Forge Parkway. Parking is $10 per vehicle with proceeds going to the Townsend Volunteer Fire Department.
Planning tips:
May 2, 2026 · Greater Smokies Event Grounds, Townsend · 10am to 4pm
The 6th Annual Smoky Mountain Bigfoot Festival celebrates the legendary creature’s birthday with a full day event in Townsend. Vendors, speakers, and activities centered on the Bigfoot mythology that runs deep through Appalachian culture. It is lighthearted, kid-friendly, and genuinely fun if you go in with the right spirit. A great early May option for families who want something a little off the beaten path.
Every Wednesday starting May 6 through September · Cades Cove Loop Road, Great Smoky Mountains National Park · Free
Starting the first Wednesday of May and running every Wednesday through the end of summer, the Cades Cove Loop Road closes to all motor vehicles from 6am until 11am. The 11-mile loop is open exclusively to cyclists, hikers, and walkers. No cars, no exhaust, no traffic. Just you, the open valley, and whatever wildlife decides to show up that morning.
This is one of the best kept secrets in the national park for visitors who have a bike or want to walk without the constant stream of vehicles moving around them. Deer, wild turkey, and black bears are regularly spotted on the loop and the absence of engine noise changes the experience entirely. Arrive before 7am for the best wildlife window and the quietest stretch of the loop. If you do not have bikes, several rental operations in the Gatlinburg and Townsend area offer morning rentals specifically for Cades Cove vehicle-free days.
Brew Week: June 8 to 11, but participating venues in May · Maryville and Townsend area
While the official Hops in the Hills Craft Beer Festival runs in early June, several participating venues in Maryville and Townsend roll out special taps and events in the weeks leading up to it. Peaceful Side Social in Townsend, Two Doors Down, Swäˈrā Brewing Company, and Brackins Blues Club are among the participating spots. If you are staying in the Smokies in late May, a slow afternoon driving between a few of these taprooms along the foothills is the most enjoyable way to spend a Tuesday that most visitors never discover. None of it requires a festival wristband and all of it rewards the kind of traveler who looks up from the main tourist corridor for a few hours.
May 7 to 9, 2026 · LeConte Center, Pigeon Forge
This one sounds like it is only for homeschooling families and it largely is, but the vendor hall is open to the public and worth knowing about if you are traveling with kids or interested in educational materials, curriculum resources, and handmade learning tools. The LeConte Center fills with exhibitors from across the Southeast and the surrounding activity options in Pigeon Forge make it an easy half-day stop before an afternoon at Dollywood or The Island. For families who homeschool and happen to be in the Smokies this week, this is a genuinely useful trip within the trip.
The Smoky Mountains in May runs at a pace that is hard to find in July or October. Mornings are cool enough for a deck coffee without the summer humidity. Afternoons warm up into comfortable outdoor territory. The evenings call for the hot tub and the fire pit in a way that does not require planning.
With events spread across the full month, a week-long stay gives you a real itinerary without forcing one. Pick two or three anchor events, leave the rest open, and let the mountain fill the gaps. That combination of structure and space is what a May trip to the Smoky Mountains does better than almost any other travel window of the year.