Valencia during Fallas is everything at once: firecrackers at 2pm, giant sculptures on every corner, smoke you can taste, paella at midnight, and a crowd that’s half locals and half people who flew in specifically to see what all the fuss is about. If you’re here for it — genuinely, all of it — then you already know the nights matter just as much as the days.
The best Fallas 2026 parties aren’t in the Old Town (those spots are rammed, overpriced, and packed with people who queued for 40 minutes). The best ones are at places that understand the assignment: keep the music right, keep the crowd international, and go until the city wakes up again. That’s what we do at MYA, every night of Fallas week.
Here’s exactly what’s happening, night by night.
Saturday March 8 — the pre-Fallas warm-up
Fallas officially starts on March 15, but Valencia doesn’t wait. By the first weekend of March the city is already shifting gear. The mascletàs have started, the fallas structures are going up overnight, and anyone who’s been through a Fallas before knows: you pace yourself.
The March 8 party at MYA is the warm-up — but MYA’s version of a warm-up still hits harder than most clubs on their best night. The crowd at this one is a good mix: locals who’ve been waiting for this moment since January, and early arrivals who came to Valencia a week ahead specifically to avoid the worst of the tourist wave. Energy is high without being chaotic. The sound system at the City of Arts and Sciences does what it always does.
Doors open at midnight. We go until 6am.
Saturday March 14 — Fallas opening night
The city is fully alive by now. The fallas sculptures are complete and illuminated, the streets in the Old Town are impassable after 10pm, and every bar in Ruzafa has a queue. This is the opening night of Fallas in every sense that matters to a night out.
MYA’s March 14 party is one of the most anticipated of the year. The crowd on this night is exactly what you come to Valencia hoping for: internationals, Spaniards from other cities, Valencia regulars who know what they’re doing, all in the same room. The atmosphere is different from any other Saturday in the year — something about Fallas week makes people decide to actually let go.
If you’re planning to be in Valencia for Fallas and you go to one party, this is the one. Get your tickets early — the City of Arts and Sciences draws a crowd that knows where to find the real Fallas nightlife in Valencia.
Tickets: /en/tickets — or WhatsApp us at +34 601 09 48 22 to get on the guestlist.
Sunday March 15 — Fallas official start
The Plantà is done. Valencia’s city council officially declares Fallas open. The streets outside are a controlled frenzy of firecrackers, street food, and people who haven’t slept properly in two days. It’s brilliant, and by midnight it’s also a lot.
Which is exactly why Sunday night at MYA works so well. The club is a 10-minute drive from the Old Town chaos — enough distance that you can hear yourself think, far enough that the crowd self-selects. The people who find MYA on a Sunday of Fallas week are the people who want to actually dance, not just survive in a crowded bar.
Sunday nights during Fallas have their own rhythm. Later start, longer night, energy that builds slowly and peaks around 4am. If you stayed up for the fireworks, you’ve already got the adrenaline — come let the sound system do the rest.
Wednesday March 18 — Nit del Foc
Nit del Foc — the Night of Fire — is the peak of Fallas. It’s the night Valencia puts on the biggest fireworks display in Spain, 20 minutes of synchronized pyrotechnics over the Turia riverbed that genuinely makes your chest vibrate if you’re close enough. The whole city watches. Then the whole city keeps going.
MYA’s March 18 party is built around this: we know you’re coming in already charged. You’ve just watched something genuinely spectacular. The night doesn’t end with the fireworks — it shifts. That’s what this party is about.
Nit del Foc at MYA is the loudest, most packed, most charged night of Fallas week. If you’re planning your Fallas 2026 nightlife around one midweek night, this is it. The music goes harder, the crowd stays longer, and when you walk out at 6am into the Valencia dawn, you’ll understand why people come back to Fallas every year.
Book in advance for this one. Seriously. Tickets here or WhatsApp us.
Thursday March 19 — La Cremà
The last night. La Cremà — the burning — is when Valencia sets the fallas sculptures on fire. Every single one, all night, all over the city. You walk out into the streets at midnight and the sky glows orange in four different directions. It smells like ash and gunpowder and something that might be collective catharsis.
It’s the most emotional night of Fallas. The locals are melancholy and euphoric at the same time. The tourists are trying to process what they just witnessed. And then — by 1am, 2am — people need somewhere to go with all of that.
MYA closes out Fallas with the party that makes sense of the whole week. The crowd on La Cremà night has seen things. They want to dance until sunrise and then take the tram home and sleep for 12 hours. We’re here for all of that.
Why MYA during Fallas week
A few things worth knowing if this is your first time here during Fallas.
Location. MYA is at the City of Arts and Sciences, on the south end of the old Turia riverbed. It’s about 2.5km from the Old Town. During Fallas that distance is a feature, not a bug — the traffic in the historic centre is essentially impassable from the 14th onwards, but the City of Arts is accessible via tram (line T1, stop Ciutat de les Arts) and the ride is easy even at 1am. Uber and Cabify both operate normally during Fallas.
Timing. Don’t show up before 1am expecting atmosphere. The Fallas week crowd takes its time — the streets are the pre-party, MYA is the main event. Doors are midnight, things get going around 1:30am, and the room hits its best point between 3 and 5am.
Getting in. Guestlist gets you priority access and often better door pricing. WhatsApp us at +34 601 09 48 22 before your night. If you want to skip the queue entirely, get tickets in advance — especially for March 14 and March 18.
The crowd. International, 25-35, here for the music. Fallas week at MYA brings together people from across Spain and Europe who came to Valencia specifically for this. It’s one of the best crowds of the year, by a distance.
Before you come: read these
If you’re navigating Fallas for the first time, the Fallas 2026 survival guide covers everything you need: what to see, when to move, how to eat well, and how not to lose your mind in the crowds. Read it before you arrive.
And if you’re wondering how to get from Ruzafa or the Old Town to MYA without spending 40 minutes in traffic, the Ruzafa to City of Arts nightlife itinerary has you covered with routes, timings, and a few stops worth making on the way.
Fallas only happens once a year. Valencia is only this alive for nine days. The parties that match the scale of the festival are rare, but they exist.
See you on the dancefloor.
Tickets: myastories.com/en/tickets Guestlist: WhatsApp +34 601 09 48 22