Best time to visit Lalibela for events and culture
When to visit Lalibela for festivals, cultural events, and local celebrations — the months when the city is most alive.
Best month
December
Peak pilgrimage season builds toward Genna (Jan 7) — churches alive with daily liturgies, incense, and white-robed worshippers under crystalline highland skies.
↑Pre-Genna atmosphere intensifies through December — daily morning masses at all 11 churches draw increasing numbers of pilgrims
↑Only 8mm of rain across the month and 9 daily sunshine hours — the best photographic light of the year on the church facades
↑Cool 4–22°C range ideal for walking between all clusters; cold nights add to the contemplative highland atmosphere
All months ranked — Events
Best match
Peak pilgrimage season builds toward Genna (Jan 7) — churches alive with daily liturgies, incense, and white-robed worshippers under crystalline highland skies.
#1 for events
Best match
Genna (Ethiopian Christmas on Jan 7) draws thousands of white-robed pilgrims to the rock-hewn churches — premium prices but an experience like nowhere else on earth.
#2 for events
Best match
Post-Timkat calm descends — crowds thin but the dry highland air and 9 daily sun hours make this one of the finest months to explore the churches unhurried.
#3 for events
Strong option
The dry season returns with a sweep — 8 sunshine hours, fresh post-rain vegetation, and moderate visitor numbers make this one of the best months to visit.
#4 for events
Strong option
One of Lalibela's finest months — cool nights, 9 sunshine hours, moderate visitor numbers, and the first pilgrims beginning to arrive for the December festive season.
#5 for events
Strong option
Short rains ease off — the quietest month of the year with almost no foreign visitors, affordable rates, and the churches entirely to yourself.
#6 for events
Strong option
Short rains begin but stay light — a good value window with very few tourists and affordable guesthouses near the church complex.
#7 for events
Strong option
Short rains peak at 70mm — the churches are still accessible but muddy paths and overcast skies trade off against budget-friendly prices and near-empty sites.
#8 for events
Worth considering
Meskel (Sep 27) is the great post-rainy-season festival — colourful bonfire ceremonies mark the Finding of the True Cross, with rains still heavy for most of the month.
#9 for events
Worth considering
Heavy rains begin in earnest — paths turn muddy and skies grey, but the rock-hewn churches remain accessible and prices hit budget territory.
#10 for events
Avoid
The wettest month with 230mm of rain — paths flood, visibility drops, and the highland plateau is largely inaccessible for trekking or panoramic views.
#11 for events
Avoid
Peak rainy season at 240mm — the heaviest month of the year and genuinely difficult travel conditions outside the carved church interiors.
#12 for events