8 Colorado Antique Fairs You’ll Want To Visit In 2026
Some weekends are made for errands, and some are made for wandering past rows of beautiful old things until you suddenly convince yourself that yes, you absolutely do need a velvet chair, a brass lamp, and a painting of someone else’s mysterious aunt. Colorado knows how to throw exactly that kind of irresistible treasure hunt.
These antique fairs are packed with personality, full of creaky charm, unexpected finds, and the thrilling possibility that the next booth might hold the one thing you never knew your home was missing.
One table might be stacked with hand-stitched quilts, another with retro kitchenware, weathered signs, or mid-century pieces that look like they walked straight out of a design magazine.
The fun is not just in buying something. It is in roaming slowly, chatting with vendors, and letting the day unfold without a schedule.
Across Colorado’s vintage market scene, these fairs deliver the kind of delight that turns casual browsers into full-blown collectors by lunchtime.
1. Strawberry Festival Vintage & Antique Market – Longmont, Colorado

There is something almost conspiratorially cheerful about an antique market named after strawberries. The Strawberry Festival Vintage and Antique Market lands at the Boulder County Fairgrounds Exhibit Building in Longmont on May 16 and 17, 2026, and it arrives at exactly the right moment — when Colorado spring is finally delivering on its promises and you need a reason to be outside.
The covered exhibit building at 9595 Nelson Road keeps things comfortable regardless of weather, which in Colorado is never a guarantee in May. Vendors bring a curated mix of genuine antiques, repurposed furniture, vintage clothing, and handcrafted goods that reward slow, unhurried browsing.
This is not a race. Treat it like a treasure hunt with no timer.
Longmont itself is a low-key gem sitting between Boulder and Fort Collins, easy to reach from Denver in under an hour. Pair the market visit with lunch at one of Longmont’s downtown spots for a full, satisfying Saturday.
My honest advice: arrive when doors open, because the early crowd moves with focused purpose and the best pieces disappear fast. Bring cash, bring patience, and leave room in the car.
2. Pumpkin Pie Days Vintage & Antique Market – Longmont, Colorado

Same fairgrounds, completely different energy. The Pumpkin Pie Days Vintage and Antique Market returns to the Boulder County Fairgrounds Exhibit Building in Longmont on October 10 and 11, 2026, and autumn has a way of making antique shopping feel especially meaningful.
Everything looks better when the leaves are turning and the air carries that particular October crispness.
What I appreciate about having two markets at the same venue in one year is the rhythm it creates. If you hit the Strawberry Festival in May and find yourself still thinking about that ceramic pitcher you almost bought, October gives you a second chance, with an entirely different vendor lineup and seasonal inventory that skews toward cozy, warm-toned pieces perfect for fall home decorating.
Boulder County Fairgrounds at 9595 Nelson Road is straightforward to navigate, with parking that does not require a strategy session beforehand. The exhibit building keeps the whole affair sheltered and walkable in a single pass.
October weekends in Longmont can fill up with agritourism traffic, so plan your route early. This one pairs beautifully with a cider stop or a drive through the nearby countryside before heading home.
3. A Paris Street Market at Aspen Grove – Littleton, Colorado

Somewhere between a European flea market and a Colorado Saturday morning lives A Paris Street Market at Aspen Grove in Littleton. Running on the first Saturday of each month from May through October 2026, that is May 2, June 6, July 4, August 1, September 5, and October 3, this recurring market at 7301 S.
Santa Fe Drive is the kind of event you put on a standing calendar and actually keep.
The Parisian framing is not just aesthetic window dressing. Vendors lean into vintage French country pieces, antique curiosities, artisan goods, and the sort of decorative finds that make a living room feel curated rather than assembled.
The Aspen Grove setting adds a leafy, relaxed backdrop that keeps the whole experience feeling like a leisurely afternoon rather than an errand.
Littleton sits comfortably south of Denver, making this an easy day trip for Front Range residents. July 4th landing on a market day is a genuinely fun scheduling quirk, celebrate independence by buying something wonderfully unnecessary.
My personal pick: the September market, when the light turns golden and everything looks slightly more beautiful than it probably is. Monthly access means no pressure.
Miss one, catch the next.
4. Vintage Market Days of Northern Colorado – Loveland, Colorado

Loveland has a reputation as Colorado’s sweetheart city, and the Vintage Market Days of Northern Colorado fits that identity perfectly. Running June 5 through 7, 2026, at The Ranch Events Complex on 5280 Arena Circle, this three-day market is one of the larger vintage events on the Front Range calendar and deserves every bit of that real estate.
Three days is a luxury in the antique fair world. It means you can actually come back on Sunday after reconsidering that bookcase you walked away from on Friday.
The Ranch Events Complex is a serious venue with serious capacity, which means vendors bring their A-game inventory, the kind of pieces that require a pickup truck to transport home and a good story to explain to your partner.
Loveland sits about an hour north of Denver and less than twenty minutes from Fort Collins, making it a natural anchor for a Northern Colorado weekend loop. Early June weather here tends to cooperate, though Colorado reserves the right to surprise you.
The city’s art galleries and sculpture installations along its downtown corridor make an excellent post-market detour. Budget generously, because Vintage Market Days has a well-earned reputation for tempting even the most disciplined bargain hunter.
5. Vintage Market Days of Colorado Springs – Colorado Springs, Colorado

Memorial Day weekend in Colorado Springs could mean hiking, it could mean road trips, or it could mean spending three days at the Vintage Market Days of Colorado Springs and feeling absolutely no guilt about it. Scheduled for May 29 through 31, 2026, at Norries Penrose Event Center at 1045 Lower Gold Camp Road, this market has the bones of a genuinely great weekend event.
Norries Penrose is a well-established venue in the Springs, and it handles large crowds without feeling chaotic. Vintage Market Days as a brand brings a consistent quality standard to its events, vendors are vetted, the inventory trends toward the elevated end of vintage rather than garage-sale random, and the atmosphere rewards slow, deliberate shopping.
You will not rush through this one.
Colorado Springs is spectacular in late May, with Pikes Peak still carrying snow on its upper reaches and the city humming with pre-summer energy. The Lower Gold Camp Road location puts you in a scenic part of town worth exploring before or after market hours.
If you have family in tow, the proximity to Garden of the Gods makes a strong case for a full holiday weekend itinerary. Arrive with a wish list.
Leave with things you never knew you wanted.
6. Junktique Antique Show and Market – Florence, Colorado

Florence, Colorado, already punches well above its weight class as an antique destination. The town’s Main Street is lined with independent antique dealers year-round, so adding the Junktique Antique Show and Market to the mix on May 15 and 16, 2026, feels less like an event and more like an upgrade.
The show takes over the downtown Main Street event area at 117 W. Main Street, turning the whole corridor into a sprawling open-air hunt.
The name Junktique is disarmingly honest – it promises the full spectrum from genuine antiques to lovable junk, and that range is exactly what makes events like this so entertaining. You might find a signed piece of Depression glass next to a box of vintage postcards next to a truly inexplicable ceramic rooster.
That unpredictability is the whole point.
Florence sits about forty-five minutes south of Pueblo and roughly an hour and a half from Colorado Springs, making it accessible without feeling overrun by tourism. The scale of the town keeps things personal, vendors chat, stories get shared, and prices have more flexibility than you might expect.
Plan to spend more time here than you originally budget. Florence has a way of holding people longer than they intended, and that is not a complaint.
7. Junktique Off-Main – Florence, Colorado

Florence clearly decided that one Junktique event per year was not enough, and the result is Junktique Off-Main — a monthly market launching June 12 and 13, 2026, then running the second Friday and Saturday of each month through December at 650 S. Union Street.
Seven months of recurring vintage shopping in one of Colorado’s most antique-forward small towns is a genuinely excellent idea.
The Off-Main location adds a different character to the experience compared to the Main Street show. Union Street has a slightly quieter, more neighborhood feel, which translates to a more relaxed browsing pace and a vendor mix that tends toward the eclectic and personal.
This is where the interesting stuff lives, the items with odd histories and no obvious category.
Monthly markets also build a community over time. Regular vendors get to know regular shoppers, prices become more conversational, and the whole thing develops a local-hangout quality that one-off events rarely achieve.
If you visit Florence for the May Junktique show and fall for the town, which happens regularly, Off-Main gives you a reason to return every month through the holidays. December’s market alone, with vintage ornaments and antique gift possibilities, is worth circling on the calendar right now.
8. Time Warp Vintage Expo – Pueblo, Colorado

March in Colorado is a coin flip, which makes an indoor vintage expo at the Pueblo Convention Center one of the smartest ways to spend a late-winter weekend. The Time Warp Vintage Expo lands on March 21 and 22, 2026, at 320 Central Main St. in Pueblo, and it arrives early enough in the year to feel like the antique fair season’s proper opening act.
The convention center venue means real scale, long aisles, a wide vendor mix, and the kind of floor space that accommodates everything from vintage vinyl and retro toys to mid-century furniture and antique jewelry. Time Warp leans into its name with enthusiasm, and the inventory tends to reflect that: this is a market that celebrates specific eras with genuine affection rather than vague nostalgia.
Pueblo is a city that rewards curiosity. Its steel-town history gives it a grittier, more authentic character than many Colorado destinations, and the downtown area around the convention center has seen real investment in recent years.
After the expo, a walk along the Historic Arkansas Riverwalk is a pleasant way to decompress. For anyone who treats antique hunting as a competitive sport, arriving Saturday morning when the doors first open is the only sensible strategy.
First in, best dressed, as they say.
