Every month we sort through the noise and pick the events worth your time — organized so you know exactly what to expect before you show up.
A classic spring festival and one of the best in the mid-Atlantic. Thousands of sheep, live shearing demos, fiber arts vendors, petting zoo, farm animals — all free to attend. Enough food trucks to last the day, and the vibe is genuinely different from other DMV events.
50+ teams race colorful dragon boats down the Potomac. Asian food vendors, cultural performances, and a kids' activity tent line the waterfront. Free to watch from the park, and the boats, music, and water make for great photos. This is a May tradition worth doing every year.
A 100-year-old tradition in the Blue Ridge foothills: horse racing, tailgating, and beautiful Virginia scenery all at once. Kids get mesmerized watching horses jump hedgerows at full speed. You don't need to know anything about steeplechase to have a great day — just bring a picnic and a blanket.
The Preakness is the Triple Crown's second race and it happens in Baltimore every May. The infield is where to be: live music on multiple stages, food and drinks, and the best thoroughbreds racing 30 feet in front of you. Kids under 12 get in free with a paying adult.
May is ideal for the National Children's Museum — spring field trips are winding down but summer crowds haven't hit yet. The hands-on exhibits on construction, performance, coding, and creativity are really well done. New rotating exhibits keep people coming back. Plan 2–3 hours minimum.
The most underrated family outing in the DMV. Glenstone is a private art museum with 230 acres of meadows, ponds, and woods filled with large sculptures by Serra, Koons, Bourgeois, and others. Kids respond to the scale and strangeness of the work. The May weather is perfect for exploring the grounds.
Every Saturday in May, park rangers run nature programs for kids ages 5–12: stream macroinvertebrate hunts, animal track identification, native plant walks, and owl pellet dissection. Kids earn official Junior Ranger badges by completing activity booklets. This is real science education in a fun outdoor morning.
May is Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, and the Smithsonian goes all in. Cultural performances, family storytelling sessions, cooking demos, and special gallery programming across multiple museums. The Natural History Museum, the Freer Gallery, and the American History Museum all have programming. Check si.edu for the full May schedule.
Free newsletter for DMV parents. No fluff — just the events worth your time, with honest notes from someone who's actually been.