Vendor Events in Lebanon, OR

12 farmers markets, craft fairs, festivals, and pop-ups in Lebanon, OR. Find booth fees, open spots, and apply to sell.

Farmers Markets in Lebanon(3)

Lebanon Downtown Farmers' Market

by Lebanon Downtown Farmers' Market Organizers

971 Park Street (next to Ralston Park), Lebanon, OR 97355

Thu: 2:00 PM-6:00 PM, May 23 - Oct 24

Farmers MarketContact organizer

25 spots open

The Lebanon Downtown Farmers' Market is a seasonal Thursday farmers market operating May through October in downtown Lebanon. The market provides local fresh produce, plants, garden goods, and value-added products including baked goods and prepared items. Shoppers enjoy live music and community atmosphere while vendors benefit from acceptance of SNAP/EBT, WIC, and Farm Direct checks. The market serves the local Willamette Valley community and surrounding areas, attracting shoppers seeking locally grown and produced items. This outdoor market is well-established within the community and listed on multiple official tourism and farmers market directories.

Lebanon Farmers' Market

by City of Lebanon

51 N Park St, Colburn Park, Lebanon, NH 03766

Thursdays 4 - 7 PM, May 15 - Sep 25, 2026

Farmers MarketContact organizer

Located in the heart of downtown Lebanon at Colburn Park, this weekly farmers market runs Thursday evenings from May through late September, creating a vibrant gathering spot for locals and visitors looking for fresh, locally-sourced food and goods. The market operates as a producer-only venue, meaning vendors are the actual growers, makers, and producers behind their products, so you're buying directly from the source. This direct relationship between vendor and customer is what sets farmers markets apart from other retail events and what many shoppers prioritize when building their weekly shopping habits. Throughout the growing season, you'll find an evolving selection of vegetables and fruits as the season progresses, from early spring greens and asparagus through summer berries and tomatoes, into fall squashes and root vegetables. Beyond produce, the market regularly features dairy products, maple syrup and maple products, fresh baked goods, local meat, and handmade crafts. The Thursday evening timing makes it convenient for people to stop by after work before heading home, and the weekly schedule means regular customers know exactly when to find their favorite vendors. The outdoor setting in historic Colburn Park gives the market a community-focused atmosphere that goes beyond simple transactions. The market enhances the shopping experience with weekly entertainment and the presence of community organizations, adding cultural value to the visit. For vendors, this means you're tapping into an established customer base that values local food systems and artisan goods. The regular schedule builds customer loyalty and repeat traffic week after week. If you produce vegetables, fruits, flowers, dairy, baked goods, meat, or handmade crafts, the Lebanon Farmers' Market offers a consistent Thursday evening venue to connect with a community-minded audience throughout the prime growing and selling season.

Farmers' Market of Laclede County

by Farmers' Market of Laclede County Organizers

100 Hospital Drive, Lebanon, MO 65536

Seasonal - contact organizer for schedule

Farmers MarketContact organizer

25 spots open

Lebanon's community farmers market brings together local growers and food producers at 100 Hospital Drive, offering shoppers direct access to seasonal produce, baked goods, herbs, and preserves. Operating on a weekly schedule during the growing season, this is a classic farmers market experience where you'll find vendors selling what they've grown or made themselves, rather than resold grocery items. The market attracts residents looking for fresh vegetables, fruits in season, homemade baked goods, jams, and herbs sourced nearby in Laclede County. Vendors at farmers markets like this typically include vegetable growers, fruit producers, bakers specializing in breads and pastries, and preserves makers offering jams and jellies. The customer base ranges from home cooks seeking ingredients for the week's meals to people who prioritize supporting local agriculture and want to know where their food comes from. The atmosphere is generally relaxed and social, with regulars building relationships with their favorite vendors across the season. Since the Farmers' Market of Laclede County follows a seasonal schedule, the specific produce and products available will shift throughout the year. Spring and summer bring the peak variety of fresh vegetables and fruits, while fall offers root vegetables, winter squash, and late-season items. If you're planning to set up as a vendor or visit, reach out to the organizers to confirm current market dates and any requirements for participation. This is a solid fit for food producers and growers looking to connect with a community-focused customer base in the Lebanon area.

Festivals in Lebanon(8)

Lebanon Country Fair

Lebanon, CT

July 24-26, 2026

Festival

25 spots open

Taking place over three days in late July, the Lebanon Country Fair brings together the rural character and community spirit that defines Connecticut's countryside. This one-time festival celebrates traditional fair culture with a mix of livestock competitions, equestrian events, and entertainment that appeals to both longtime fair enthusiasts and families discovering the experience for the first time. The summer timing makes it an ideal destination for vendors looking to connect with attendees in a relaxed, outdoor setting during peak season. The fair draws a diverse vendor community. You'll find traditional agricultural exhibitors showcasing livestock and farm products alongside craft vendors, food vendors, and artisans. Attendees come for the horse shows and livestock pulls, which serve as the fair's centerpiece, but they also browse booths between events, creating natural traffic patterns throughout the grounds. The Lebanon, Connecticut location positions the fair within New England's established fair circuit, attracting both regional shoppers and visitors who make fair-going a summer activity. What makes a country fair distinct from other festivals is its focus on agricultural heritage and live animal events. These create a specific energy and audience dynamic. Families often spend full days at the fair, meaning vendors have multiple opportunities to engage shoppers across different times of day. The mix of traditional fair attractions with general vendor booths means there's room for both niche and broad-appeal products. Whether you sell handmade goods, farm-based products, food, or services, the fair's mixed vendor approach and three-day run provides good exposure to a community-oriented crowd. If you're considering the Lebanon Country Fair for 2026, think about how your products fit within a family-friendly, agricultural celebration setting. The late July dates align with summer vacation schedules, supporting strong attendance throughout the weekend.

Wilson County - Tennessee State Fair

by Wilson County Promotions

James E. Ward Agricultural Center, 945 E Baddour Pkwy, Lebanon, TN 37087

August 13-22, 2026

FestivalCommercial and craft vendor booths; applications through fair office

25 spots open

Held annually at the James E. Ward Agricultural Center in Lebanon, the Wilson County fair brings together Tennessee's agricultural heritage, craft traditions, and community spirit each August. This is the state's official fair, drawing thousands of visitors over its ten-day run who come for livestock competitions, live entertainment across multiple stages, and the wide variety of vendor booths that line the fairgrounds. For vendors, a state fair offers something different from smaller farmers markets or craft shows: it's a destination event with built-in foot traffic from families, agriculture enthusiasts, and people traveling specifically to attend. The diverse audience means there's room for many vendor categories, from traditional handmade goods to food products, artisan crafts, and agricultural offerings. The fair's setting at the James E. Ward Agricultural Center provides a full-scale festival environment where attendees spend entire days exploring. Livestock shows and competitions draw serious agricultural interest, while the historic Fiddlers Grove village area adds cultural authenticity to the experience. With fifteen entertainment stages scattered throughout the grounds, there's constant activity and reasons for visitors to move through different sections, which benefits vendors stationed in various areas. What makes this event attractive for vendors is the mix of attendee types. You'll see serious craft and art buyers, families looking for handmade gifts and artisan food products, and people interested in supporting Tennessee-made goods. The fair celebrates Tennessee creativity and craftsmanship, so handmade items, local food products, and regional artisan work fit naturally into the vendor mix. The August timing means summer fair season energy, when people are out and spending, and the 2026 dates of August 13-22 align with back-to-school season and family outings before summer winds down. Whether you make crafts, produce food items, grow or raise agricultural products, or create handmade goods, a state fair typically attracts serious buyers ready to shop and support small makers.

Lebanon Wilson County Fair Craft Pavilion

by Wilson County Promotions

James E. Ward Agricultural Center, 945 E Baddour Pkwy, Lebanon, TN 37087

August 13-22, 2026

FestivalContact organizer

100 spots open

The Wilson County - Tennessee State Fair is a 10-day agricultural fair celebrating Tennessee heritage and community engagement. The fair features extensive vendor opportunities through commercial booths, agricultural exhibits featuring fine arts, photography, stained glass, and quilts, farm and exotic animal displays, livestock shows, and poultry exhibitions. Vendors showcase handmade crafts, food products, and county goods to an estimated 750,000 visitors. The fair includes amusement attractions, live entertainment across multiple stages, tractor pulls, demonstrations, and family-friendly activities. Held at the James E. Ward Agricultural Center fairgrounds in Lebanon, this is Tennessee's largest county fair, offering robust foot traffic and community engagement for craft and retail vendors.

Connecticut Renaissance Faire

by Stone Circle Inc

122 Mack Rd, Lebanon, CT 06249

Aug 29-Oct 25, 2026 (weekends)

FestivalContact organizer

50 spots open

The Connecticut Renaissance Faire is a multi-weekend autumn festival transforming the Lebanon Country Fairgrounds into a 16th-century village. The 2026 season runs nine weekends from late August through October, featuring over 200 artisan vendors selling handcrafted goods, fine art, and period wares alongside live entertainment across 13 stages. The event attracts tens of thousands of visitors seeking full-contact jousting, comedy shows, interactive games, period food, and themed weekend experiences. Vendors at this mature festival include crafters of jewelry, leather goods, pottery, glass, metalwork, and textiles. The family-friendly atmosphere includes activities for all ages, with daily operations from 10:30 AM to 6 PM. This established, well-promoted event offers vendors substantial foot traffic and a devoted audience of renaissance enthusiasts, making it an excellent platform for handcrafted and themed merchandise.

Lebanon Strawberry Festival

by Lebanon Strawberry Festival

Lebanon, OR

2027-06-04

FestivalContact for booth fee

20 spots open

The Lebanon Strawberry Festival is a community-wide celebration held during the first full weekend in June, featuring parades, live entertainment, carnival games, and a legendary World's Largest Strawberry Shortcake. The event hosts over 100 vendors selling handmade goods, jewelry, baked goods, art, unique artisan finds, and commercial services. Food vendors offer both traditional fair favorites and strawberry-inspired specialties. The festival is a heritage tradition dating to 1909 and takes place at Cheadle Lake Park in Lebanon, Oregon. The festival is an outdoor event on varied terrain with free parking, and attracts thousands of visitors across the four-day weekend. Vendors typically operate all four days, with county fair vendors closing at 9pm Thursday through Saturday.

Lebanon Route 66 Centennial Festival

by Lebanon Route 66 Society / City of Lebanon

Lebanon, MO

2027-06-05

FestivalContact City of Lebanon

20 spots open

Each June, Lebanon, Missouri celebrates its place along the legendary Mother Road with the Lebanon Route 66 Centennial Festival, a community-wide event that draws Route 66 enthusiasts, families, and curious visitors from across the region. This annual festival honors the historic highway's cultural significance and brings together the spirit of classic Americana with modern community celebration. The event transforms downtown Lebanon into a vibrant gathering space where nostalgia, live entertainment, and local commerce converge. The festival features multiple attractions spread throughout the day and venue, creating different zones for various interests and vendor opportunities. A parade kicks off the festivities, followed by a cruise-in where classic car enthusiasts display vintage vehicles that echo the golden age of cross-country travel. The Vendor Village provides a dedicated marketplace space where crafters, artisans, and small businesses can reach an engaged audience actively looking to shop and support local vendors. This setup makes the festival appealing for vendors offering handmade goods, Route 66 memorabilia, crafts, and locally-made products that align with the event's retro and community-focused theme. Food offerings play a significant role in the Lebanon Route 66 Centennial Festival, with a food truck court providing diverse dining options that keep attendees on the grounds longer and create natural foot traffic past vendor booths. The inclusion of live music, including major acts, ensures the festival has entertainment drawing crowds throughout the day. The combination of a working parade, automotive showcase, organized vendor spaces, and musical performances makes this a multi-faceted community event rather than a single-purpose market. Vendors at community festivals like this typically see strong attendance from families, road trip enthusiasts, collectors, and locals who treat the day as a celebration worth planning around. The Route 66 theme gives the event distinctive character that appeals to vendors with products tied to vintage culture, travel, Americana, or general craft offerings that fit a classic American aesthetic.

Connecticut Bacon Festival

Lebanon, CT

June 27-28, 2027

Festival

25 spots open

Taking place in Lebanon, Connecticut over the weekend of June 27-28, 2026, this festival celebrates all things bacon with a lively mix of food vendors, local artisans, live entertainment, and family-friendly activities. The event brings together the region's food culture and craft community in a celebration that appeals to both serious food enthusiasts and casual weekend visitors looking for a fun outing. You'll find a diverse vendor mix at the Connecticut Bacon Festival, from food producers and restaurants showcasing bacon-forward dishes to local crafters selling handmade goods, preserves, sauces, and other artisanal products. The festival structure creates natural traffic flow as attendees move between food sampling stations and craft vendor booths, giving makers and sellers solid exposure to a crowd specifically in the mood to discover new products and support local businesses. The June timing means summer weather typically brings good attendance, and the two-day format allows vendors to build momentum from Saturday into Sunday. Beyond shopping and eating, the festival atmosphere includes live music performances and activities designed to engage families and different age groups. This kind of programming keeps people on the grounds longer, creates multiple reasons for return visits on day two, and builds the festive energy that makes attendees more likely to spend time browsing vendor booths. The bacon-themed focus gives the event a distinctive character that attracts food lovers and curious crowds who might not attend a generic craft fair. For vendors, a festival like this one offers the advantage of a clearly themed event that draws an engaged, excited audience. The combination of food vendors and craft sellers means customers arrive ready to make purchases across multiple categories, whether they're looking for a unique gift, specialty food item, or handmade product. The Lebanon location serves the broader Connecticut market and surrounding areas, pulling from both local and regional attendee bases.

FoodieLand Food Festival Nashville

by FoodieLand

Nashville Superspeedway, Lebanon, TN 37210

August 28-30, 2026

FestivalContact organizer

25 spots open

Nation's largest food festival with 250+ vendors, artisan shops, global flavors, live music, and games. 3 PM-10 PM Friday-Sunday at Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon (within 50 miles).

Craft Fairs in Lebanon(1)

Lebanon Craft Fair

Lebanon, NH

November 14-15, 2026

Craft Fair

25 spots open

If you're looking to reach shoppers actively seeking handmade goods in the Upper Valley region, the Lebanon Craft Fair on November 14-15, 2026 offers a solid opportunity to connect with your target audience. This one-time event brings together local artisans and crafters in Lebanon, NH during the busy pre-holiday shopping season, when customers are actively hunting for unique, handcrafted gifts that go beyond mass-produced options. Craft fairs like this typically draw a mix of serious gift shoppers, local collectors, and people specifically seeking one-of-a-kind items they won't find in chain stores. The November timing means you'll catch the early holiday shopping crowd, including those looking to support local makers and find meaningful presents. Lebanon's location in New Hampshire makes it accessible to shoppers from surrounding communities, and the two-day format gives you extended exposure to foot traffic across both weekend days. Vendors at craft fairs typically showcase handmade jewelry, ceramics, woodwork, textiles, home décor, art, soaps, candles, seasonal items, and other artisanal products. This is a venue where customers expect quality craftsmanship and are willing to pay accordingly for items made by hand. Unlike farmers markets that focus on produce and food, or larger festivals that mix many categories, craft fairs concentrate on artisan-made goods, which means attendees are there specifically for that experience and often come prepared to spend on special finds. The Lebanon Craft Fair represents a chance to build relationships with local shoppers during a key retail period, test new products, and showcase your work alongside other quality makers in the community. If your handmade products appeal to gift-givers and collectors looking for authentic, locally-crafted items, this event aligns well with both your inventory and your customer's shopping mindset.

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