
Monday, July 27, 2026
Guerneville, CA
Guerneville, CA 95446, United StatesLet people know you're going, see who else is attending, and share the event with friends.
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For one week at the height of summer, a tiny redwood town on the Russian River becomes the West Coast capital of the bear community. Lazy Bear Week 2026 runs July 27 through August 3 in Guerneville, California, and it's one of the largest and longest-running bear gatherings anywhere — pool parties in the sun, dance floors under the redwoods, campfires, and a whole town of guesthouses and river bars packed with bears, cubs, otters, and admirers from all over the world.
If you've never done Lazy Bear, here's the thing to understand: it isn't a single blowout party, it's a week-long rhythm set to the pace of the river. Days start slow and hot around the pool, drift into afternoons floating on the water or lying on the beach, and build toward the nightly parties that spill out across Guerneville's handful of bars and resorts. This guide covers the whole week — the schedule, the pool parties, the big Saturday dance, the charity behind it all, where to stay, and how to get to the far edge of Sonoma County.
Lazy Bear Week 2026 officially runs Monday, July 27 through Monday, August 3, in Guerneville, California. It's a full week rather than a single weekend, and 2026 marks the event's 30th anniversary. The heaviest crowds land on the closing weekend around the Fireside Fling, but the mid-week days on the river have their own devoted following — looser, sunnier, and for many regulars the best part of the trip.
Guerneville is a small town, and Lazy Bear is by far its busiest stretch of the year. If you're booking flights or a room, plan around those exact dates and give yourself the shoulder days — arriving before the weekend and staying an extra night beats trying to squeeze the whole thing into two days. And do it early: the town's guesthouses and resorts fill up long in advance.
Lazy Bear doesn't run on a single master timetable so much as a daily rhythm that repeats across the week, with a few big anchors scattered through it. Once you learn the shape of a day, you can plan around whatever you don't want to miss. A typical Lazy Bear day looks like this:
Across the week, watch for the recurring anchors: daily R3 pool parties, the Rainbow Cattle Co. meet & greet, a onesie party, campfire and movie nights, and the closing-weekend tea dance and Fireside Fling. Because the official lineup is finalized closer to the event, the full, current schedule is published on the Lazy Bear Fund events page — check it once you arrive so you can pack the right outfit and grab tickets to anything that sells out.
Pro Tip
Lazy Bear is a registration-and-Tag event, not a wristband-at-the-door festival. Buy your Lazy Bear Week Tag through the [official Lazy Bear Fund](https://www.lazybearfund.org/) channels ahead of time — it's how the fundraising works, and it's what gets you into the official parties.
If Lazy Bear has a single center of gravity, it's the pool at the R3 Hotel. Every day, the deck at the R3 Hotel on Fourth Street fills up with bears in the sun — DJs work the party, the pool stays packed, and the whole daytime scene of the week orbits around this one courtyard. The R3 is an adults-only, gay guesthouse a short walk from the banks of the Russian River, and during Lazy Bear it becomes the beating heart of the daytime action.
The pool parties are where the week's friendships get made. They're social, sunny, and central to everything — the kind of low-stakes, all-afternoon hang that makes it easy to fall into a group even if you showed up alone. Between the pool and the river, the daytime is honestly half the reason people come back year after year.
Pro Tip
The Guerneville sun is no joke in late July. Bring sunscreen, water, and a hat for the pool deck — and reapply. The party runs for hours in full sun, and the river is hotter and drier than the coast just twenty minutes away.
The week builds toward its headline night on the closing Saturday: the Fireside Fling, the big Lazy Bear dance party held in the grove at the West Sonoma Inn. It's the one everyone points to — a proper late-night dance under the trees that pulls the whole week's crowd onto one floor. The night before, the Sunset Tea Dance down by the water at Johnson's Beach eases the closing weekend into gear.
Those two are the marquee nights, but the truth of Lazy Bear is that the parties fan out across the whole town, and the bars and resorts carry the mid-week energy. The meet & greet at the Rainbow Cattle Company — "the Rainbow," Sonoma County's longtime gay bar, open since 1979 — is a classic gathering point. Themed nights like the onesie party at the West Sonoma Inn grove, plus campfire and movie nights in the meadow, round out the week. Because names, venues, and times shift year to year, confirm the current lineup on the official schedule when you arrive.
Lazy Bear isn't just a party — it's a fundraiser, and that's a big part of why the community shows up for it. Lazy Bear Fund, Inc. is a nonprofit that puts on the week's events and donates all profits to charity. Over 30 years, the event has raised more than $2.5 million for worthy causes, distributing grants to organizations that support LGBTQ+ communities and broader health and human-services initiatives.
That mission is the reason the Tag system matters. When you register and buy your Lazy Bear Week Tag, you're not just paying for entry — you're funding the grants. It's a rare gay travel weekend where the more fun you have, the more good you do, and it's part of what's kept the event beloved for three decades. You can read about the fund's grant recipients and year-round work at lazybearfund.org.
Half of Lazy Bear happens away from any dance floor, out on the river and under the redwoods. Guerneville sits right on the Russian River, and the water is the main draw between parties. Bears claim spots at Johnson's Beach in the middle of town, and plenty of people rent kayaks or canoes and spend a slow afternoon paddling the river — outfitters like King's Sport & Tackle in town and Burke's Canoe Trips in nearby Forestville run trips all summer.
When you want shade, the Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve sits right on the edge of town — ancient coast redwoods and cool, quiet trails a few minutes from the pool deck. The wider Russian River Valley is wine country, with hundreds of wineries within a short drive if you want a tasting between pool days, and the Pacific coast is about twenty minutes west for a beach day. Even at the busiest week of the year, a quiet redwood grove or an empty stretch of river is never far away.
Pro Tip
Guerneville is tiny and walkable at its center, but the beaches, redwoods, and wineries are spread out. A car (or a friend with one) makes the daytime river-and-redwoods side of the trip much easier — but if you're planted around the R3 pool and the downtown bars, you can happily go car-free for the parties.
Plan Your Lazy Bear Trip
Browse Guerneville's bars, guesthouses, and this week's events — and save your favorites — on the Out x Out app.
Guerneville is a small town, and Lazy Bear is its busiest stretch of summer — rooms at the gay guesthouses and river resorts sell out months in advance, often with multi-night minimums and deposits. Book as early as you possibly can, and don't be surprised if the most central spots are gone by spring.
The R3 Hotel is the center of gravity — it hosts the daily pool parties, so staying there puts you steps from the daytime action (and it books out first). Just outside downtown, the Highlands Resort is a longtime clothing-optional gay resort with a pool and campground on wooded grounds, and Dawn Ranch is a larger resort property along the river. Closer to the water, the Creekside Inn & Resort and the West Sonoma Inn (whose grove hosts the closing parties) put you near both the river and the nightlife. For something more design-forward, The Stavrand is a boutique retreat in the redwoods, and AutoCamp Russian River offers restored Airstream trailers a short drive from town.
If the guesthouses are booked out, vacation rentals and shared river houses are a Lazy Bear tradition — group houses split among friends are common and often the best value on the river. Book those earliest of all; the good ones go months ahead.
Guerneville sits deep in Sonoma County, and getting there is part of the trip:
Pro Tip
Guerneville's downtown is walkable, but parking gets tight during Lazy Bear and the roads out to the beaches and redwoods aren't served by much transit. If you're staying downtown for the parties, you can park and leave the car — but line up a rideshare or a designated driver for late nights between venues.
Lazy Bear Week 2026 runs Monday, July 27 through Monday, August 3, in Guerneville, California — the event's 30th anniversary.
Lazy Bear Week takes place in Guerneville, California, a small town on the Russian River in Sonoma County's wine country, about 90 minutes north of San Francisco. The daily pool parties are centered at the R3 Hotel on Fourth Street, with other events spread across downtown bars and nearby river resorts.
Yes — Lazy Bear is a registration-based event. Buying a Lazy Bear Week Tag through the official Lazy Bear Fund is how you get into the official parties, and it's how the fundraising works, since all profits go to charity. Register ahead of time rather than waiting until you arrive.
The Fireside Fling is Lazy Bear's headline dance party, held in the grove at the West Sonoma Inn on the closing Saturday of the week. It's the biggest night of Lazy Bear, pulling the whole week's crowd onto one late-night dance floor under the redwoods.
Yes. Lazy Bear Fund, Inc. is a nonprofit that donates all profits from the week to charity. Over 30 years the event has raised more than $2.5 million for LGBTQ+ communities and broader health and human-services causes, distributing grants to partner organizations.
Most visitors drive about 90 minutes north from San Francisco, or fly into Charles M. Schulz–Sonoma County Airport (STS) in Santa Rosa, which is roughly 20 minutes from Guerneville. San Francisco (SFO) and Oakland (OAK) airports have more flights but require a longer drive north. A car is the easiest way to reach town and to explore the river and redwoods.
As early as possible. Guerneville is a small town, and Lazy Bear is its busiest week of the year — the gay guesthouses and river resorts sell out months in advance, often with multi-night minimums and deposits. The most central spots, like the R3 Hotel, book out first.
Planning the rest of your trip? Check the [official Lazy Bear Fund schedule](https://www.lazybearfund.org/events) for the current lineup and to buy your Lazy Bear Week Tag — and browse Guerneville's bars, guesthouses, and this week's events on the Out x Out app.
