Last updated: July 10, 2026. The Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel helps festival organizers, event managers, sponsorship teams, and entertainment finance analysts review revenue, cost, net profit, tickets sold, ratings, occupancy, and sponsorship in one editable workbook. Music festivals often involve many moving parts: ticket tiers, artist genres, venue types, regions, sales channels, sponsors, organizers, and seasonal demand. A small change in ticket volume, sponsor value, venue occupancy, or operating cost can change the event margin quickly.
This Excel dashboard gives teams a practical reporting layer without starting from a blank workbook or paying for a large SaaS reporting tool. Replace the sample records in the Data Sheet, click Refresh All from the Excel Data ribbon, and use slicers to filter by festival, city, region, genre, venue type, organizer, sponsor level, ticket tier, status, month, quarter, and year.
Click here to purchase the Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel

Key Features of Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel
- 5 dashboard pages: Overview Page, Revenue Trend, Festival Mix, Audience, and Sponsor ROI.
- 5 executive KPI cards: Total Festivals, Profit Margin %, Total Tickets Sold, Avg. Customer Rating, and Total Sponsorship.
- Multiple slicers: Filter analysis quickly during review meetings without rebuilding formulas.
- Revenue and cost analysis: Compare festival revenue, ticket revenue, festival cost, net profit, and margin by month, year, quarter, region, and festival name.
- Audience and venue analysis: Review tickets sold, customer rating, sales channel, venue type, city occupancy, and ticket tier performance.
- Sponsorship analysis: Track sponsorship by sponsor level and organizer, then compare sponsor views with profitability and audience rating.
- Data and Support sheets: Update the Data Sheet and refresh the pivot-powered Support Sheet to keep the whole dashboard connected.
Dashboard Pages Explanation
1 – Overview Page
The Overview Page is the leadership snapshot for the workbook. At the top, KPI cards show Total Festivals, Profit Margin %, Total Tickets Sold, Avg. Customer Rating, and Total Sponsorship. These cards make it easier to review festival scale, profitability, demand, audience experience, and sponsor value before drilling into the detail pages.
Total Festival Revenue and Net Profit by Month: This chart compares monthly revenue with net profit. It helps organizers see seasonal movement and identify months where high ticket or sponsor revenue did not fully convert into profit.
Total Festival Revenue and Net Profit by Year: This chart gives a year-level trend view. It helps management understand whether festival growth is improving both top-line revenue and bottom-line net profit.
Total Festival Revenue and Total Festival Cost by Region: This chart compares income and cost across regions. It helps teams spot regions where cost is too high relative to the revenue being generated.
Total Tickets Sold by Genre: This chart shows genre-level ticket demand. It supports artist booking, stage planning, promotion strategy, and audience targeting decisions.

2 – Revenue Trend
The Revenue Trend sheet is built for financial review across time, geography, and festival names. Total Festival Revenue and Total Festival Cost by Quarter compares quarterly income against expense pressure. It helps finance teams check whether event cost is rising faster than revenue.
Profit Margin % by Region highlights which regions protect margin and which regions need pricing, cost, or venue review. Total Festival Revenue by Festival Name ranks individual festivals by revenue, while Total Ticket Revenue by Month reveals month-wise ticket income movement.

3 – Festival Mix
The Festival Mix sheet helps users understand the structure of the event portfolio. Occupancy % by Venue Type compares fill rate across venue formats. It is useful when teams need to decide whether stadiums, arenas, open grounds, clubs, or other venue types are producing the best capacity use.
Total Festivals by Status shows whether events are active, completed, cancelled, planned, or delayed. Total Tickets Sold by Ticket Tier compares demand across VIP, general admission, early bird, and other tiers. Net Profit and Total Festival Cost by Organizer connects organizer performance with cost control.

4 – Audience
The Audience sheet connects sales channels, regional rating, sponsor level, and city occupancy. Total Ticket Revenue by Sales Channel helps teams see whether online sales, box office, partner channels, agencies, or other channels are contributing the most ticket income.
Avg. Customer Rating by Region compares audience satisfaction by geography. Total Sponsorship by Sponsor Level shows sponsor contribution by tier, and Occupancy % by City helps identify cities where venue utilization is strong or weak.

5 – Sponsor ROI
The Sponsor ROI sheet gives sponsorship and profitability context. Profit Margin % by Genre helps users see which music categories are more profitable after cost. Avg. Customer Rating by Venue Type connects venue selection with attendee experience.
Total Sponsorship by Organizer compares sponsor value across organizers. This can support sponsor renewal conversations, organizer performance review, and planning for the next festival season.

6 – Data Sheet Tab
The Data Sheet is the input table for the dashboard. Add or replace records in the same format, keep the same headers, and the connected cards, slicers, pivots, and charts will continue to work.

7 – Support Sheet
The Support Sheet contains multiple pivot tables used to create the dashboard dynamically. After updating the Data Sheet, go to the Excel Data ribbon and click Refresh All. All pivots and related charts refresh together, and this sheet can be hidden for regular users.

Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel vs. Google Sheets vs. Paid Event SaaS – Feature Comparison
| Feature | This Excel dashboard | Google Sheets alternative | Paid event SaaS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost | $17.99 one-time sale price | Low tool cost but more setup work | Recurring subscription |
| Platform | Microsoft Excel | Browser-based spreadsheet | Vendor-hosted platform |
| Setup time | Replace data and refresh pivots | Import data and adjust formulas | Implementation and onboarding |
| Real-time team collaboration | Available through OneDrive or SharePoint | Native Google Drive sharing | Usually included by plan |
| Mobile access | Excel mobile app or cloud sharing | Google Sheets mobile app | Usually included by plan |
| Customizable fields | Edit sheets, charts, pivots, labels, and slicers | Edit formulas and charts | Depends on vendor permissions |
| Share with link | Available if stored in OneDrive or SharePoint | Available through Google Drive | Usually requires user accounts |
| Year-1 cost at 5 users | $17.99 plus Microsoft licensing if needed | Low software cost plus build time | Often hundreds or thousands |
| Festival reporting | Revenue, cost, profit, tickets, ratings, occupancy, sponsorship, genre, city, and organizer views | Must be built or adapted | Depends on purchased modules |
Who Should Use This Template
This template is useful for music festival organizers, event managers, concert promoters, venue coordinators, sponsorship managers, entertainment finance teams, ticketing analysts, and consultants who need a repeatable Excel reporting workbook for festival performance.
It is not a ticketing platform, payment gateway, artist booking tool, live crowd control system, CRM, or sponsor contract system. It works best when your operational festival data is already available in rows and columns.
Real-World Use Cases
Maya, festival operations lead: reviews occupancy by city and venue type before choosing future venues and capacity plans.
Daniel, sponsorship manager: compares Total Sponsorship by Sponsor Level and Organizer before preparing sponsor renewal notes.
Priya, event finance analyst: uses revenue, cost, net profit, and margin views to prepare monthly profitability updates for a festival group.
Advantages of Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel
- It brings revenue, cost, tickets, sponsorship, ratings, and occupancy into one workbook.
- It gives leaders a fast Overview Page while still offering deeper analysis pages.
- It uses slicers, pivot tables, and charts, so users can filter without rebuilding reports.
- It is editable in Excel, making it easier to adjust labels, charts, and fields for local reporting needs.
- It avoids a recurring SaaS subscription for teams that only need spreadsheet-based reporting.
Opportunities for Improvement
Advanced teams may extend the workbook with automated ticketing imports, artist-level profitability, merchandise analysis, food and beverage sales, refund tracking, or day-by-day event operations. Teams that need live attendance, access control, payment processing, or artist contract workflows should use this dashboard alongside dedicated event systems rather than as a replacement.
Best Practices
- Keep the Data Sheet headers unchanged when replacing sample records.
- Refresh all pivots after every data update.
- Review revenue and cost together so high ticket sales do not hide weak profitability.
- Use slicers during monthly or post-event review meetings to answer follow-up questions quickly.
- Use Microsoft guidance for Excel tables and structured references when extending the workbook: Create and format tables in Excel.
Explore Relevant Templates
You may also like Music Festival KPI Dashboard in Excel, Music Festival KPI Scorecard in Excel, and Micro Breweries Pubs Dashboard in Excel. You can also browse all Excel dashboard templates.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel track?
It tracks total festivals, profit margin %, total tickets sold, average customer rating, total sponsorship, festival revenue, festival cost, net profit, ticket revenue, occupancy, region, city, genre, venue type, sponsor level, organizer, status, ticket tier, month, quarter, and year.
Can I replace the sample data with my own festival data?
Yes. Replace the sample rows in the Data Sheet, keep the same headers, and click Refresh All from the Excel Data ribbon.
Does the workbook use macros?
No. It is designed around Excel tables, pivot tables, charts, and slicers.
Can I customize the dashboard pages?
Yes. You can edit sheet names, labels, chart formatting, slicers, pivot fields, and source data columns if you are comfortable with Excel.
Is this a ticketing or event operations system?
No. It is an analytics dashboard for reporting. It does not sell tickets, process payments, scan attendees, book artists, or manage live operations.
Is this a subscription?
No. It is a one-time downloadable Excel template from NextGenTemplates.
About the Author
Built by PK – Microsoft Certified Professional with 15+ years of Excel, Google Sheets, and Power BI experience. Founder of NextGenTemplates, reaching 300K+ subscribers across YouTube channels. Every template is hand-built and tested before release.
Conclusion
The Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel gives event teams a clear way to analyze festival revenue, cost, net profit, tickets sold, customer rating, occupancy, sponsorship, region, genre, venue type, and organizer performance without building a workbook from scratch. It is a focused Excel dashboard for teams that want better post-event reviews, cleaner sponsorship conversations, and faster financial reporting.
Click here to purchase the Music Festivals Dashboard in Excel
Visit our YouTube channel for step-by-step Excel tutorials: youtube.com/@PKAnExcelExpert


