No Logo Reggae Festival Secures 10-Year Home in Haute-Saône Village
No Logo has locked in a 10-year base in Pont-sur-l’Ognon, a village of 62 people, ending the search that followed its last Fraisans edition.

No Logo has found a home for the next decade in one of the smallest villages ever to host a major reggae gathering: Pont-sur-l’Ognon, a Haute-Saône commune with just 62 inhabitants. The move ends months of uncertainty around one of France’s biggest reggae festivals and gives fans a clear landing point for the years ahead.
The 13th edition is scheduled for August 7 to 9, 2026, at the domaine Les 12 Ponts, with the festival committing to the site for 10 years. That long-term deal matters far beyond one summer. It stabilizes the event after a relocation debate that followed the end of its run at Fraisans, where No Logo spent 12 years and held its final edition in 2025.
For regulars, the announcement means planning can start with a fixed map rather than a moving target. Ticket sales for 2026 are set to open on May 1, and 5,000 three-day passes will go on sale. That limited batch will likely make the first release date a key moment for anyone building a summer itinerary around the festival.
The scale of the setting is part of the story. Pont-sur-l’Ognon sits between Rougemont and Villersexel, near the border of Haute-Saône and the Doubs, putting the festival in a rural pocket of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté that is far smaller than the event itself. No Logo has described itself as an independent reggae and dub festival, and regional coverage has long placed it among the biggest reggae festivals in France.
That contrast has always been central to the No Logo identity. The festival was created in 2013, and its first edition was staged on August 14 and 15 that year at Les Forges de Fraisans in the Jura, put together in just 40 days. What began as a fast-built first chapter has grown into a fixture of the French reggae calendar, with a fan base now following it into a new decade-long chapter.
For the host village, the agreement brings a festival of national weight into a place most people would drive through without stopping. For No Logo, it secures continuity after the break with Fraisans and gives the event the stability it needs to keep building on its position at the center of the French reggae scene.
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