ANN ARBOR, Michigan — The Ann Arbor Art Fair 2025 was cut short on Saturday, July 19, as severe weather prompted organizers to shut down operations three hours early, at 5 p.m., out of what they described as “an abundance of caution.”
Forecasts from the National Weather Service had already warned of strong afternoon and evening thunderstorms expected to sweep through Southeast Michigan, including Washtenaw County. The system was projected to bring hail and damaging wind gusts up to 60 mph, raising concerns for both safety and logistics. A “hazardous weather outlook” was in effect for multiple counties across the region.
Originally scheduled to wrap up at 8 p.m., Saturday marked the final day of this year’s Ann Arbor Art Fair, which began on Thursday, July 17. Despite the abrupt closure, the event still welcomed hundreds of thousands of visitors across its three-day run.
Known as the largest juried art fair in the country, the Ann Arbor Art Fair covers 30 city blocks in the heart of downtown Ann Arbor. It combines three distinct fairs — the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair, The Original, The Guild’s Ann Arbor Summer Art Fair, and the Ann Arbor State Street District Art Fair — into one massive celebration of creativity and community.
Nearly 1,000 artists took part this year, drawing an estimated 400,000 attendees to Maynard Street and surrounding areas, even as the weather shifted from sun-drenched to storm-threatening.
The storm threat follows a stretch of warm, humid conditions, with temperatures hovering in the low 80s Fahrenheit (around 27°C) through much of the fair. Local residents and out-of-town guests alike made the most of the balmy start before weather disruptions moved in.


