This is our comprehensive event listing page for every single event that gets submitted to our website - from small workshops and community events to international sporting fixtures and citywide festivals.
So if you're looking for something specific, please use the filter tags and date search below, to help narrow the event listings results for what you'd really like to see/find.
Alternatively, visit our What's On page for seasonal highlights and roundups of the bigger events happening in Sheffield.
Step into a world of romance, as Sheffield General Cemetery welcome back Simply Strings for a night of intimate music by candlelight in the Samuel Worth Chapel, from the hugely popular Netflix series Bridgerton.
Acclaimed saxophonist & composer Josephine Davies brings her exciting, dynamic ensemble Satori to Sheffield to celebrate the launch of ‘Weatherwards’, their fourth album on Whirlwind Recordings.
The Divine Comedy play live at the Sheffield City Hall, in the Oval Hall.
Direct from The Royal Albert Hall, A Country Night In Nashville recreates the scene of a buzzing honky tonk in downtown Nashville, perfectly capturing the energy and atmosphere of an evening in the home of country music.
Brigantes Orchestra play Boléro and the Organ Symphony!
Tales of hidden women, of protest, and shapeshifting through modern and ancient worlds.
Éliane Radigue’s ‘Occam XXV’ – written for, and performed here by, the French organist Frédéric Blondy – envelops its listener in a rich and slowly evolving ocean of sound.
Hi Res Heart is an improvising jazz group where spaciousness and fire co-exist. Even when the music is at its most abstract, the spirit of the blues is never too far away.
South Yorkshire's Self Esteem, AKA Rebecca Lucy Taylor, is heading back home to play her biggest Sheffield show yet, coming to the Utilita Arena on Saturday 18 October, as part of a UK tour.
The Brno Philharmonic, the first international orchestra of the season, appear under the direction of their Artistic Director and Principal Conductor, Dennis Russell Davies, who opens the concert with Janáček's Lachian Dances, brimming with Czech folk tunes, and closes it with Dvořák’s passionate Seventh Symphony.