A catalog of recommended festival booths for school culture festivals, with ideas that will shine on social media.
Have you already decided what your class or club will do for your school’s cultural festival or school festival booth?
Even if you’re serving food, there are countless menu options, and if it’s not food, it can be hard to decide what to offer.
In this article, we’ll introduce a wide range of ideas: not only classic food and drink booths, but also interactive booths like games.
We’ve compiled everything from staple booths at cultural festivals to slightly unusual ideas, so be sure to use this as a reference!
- Festival booth menu items that can be served without cooking and without using fire
- Instagrammable cultural festival foods: featuring trendy sweets and Korean eats
- [By Genre] Cultural Festival / School Festival Booth Catalog [2026]
- Recommended foods for a high school cultural festival: from Instagrammable items to easy, casual bites.
- Recommended for school cultural festivals! Stall ideas that let you enjoy a traditional fair atmosphere
- Summary of unusual foods we’d like to offer at the school festival’s food stall
- [Non-food] Cultural festival attractions: from classroom exhibits to stage events
- Unusual attractions you can do in a classroom for a cultural or school festival
- Cultural Festival: Ranking of Popular Booth Ideas
- Better than a theme park! Attractions perfect for school cultural festivals
- Recommended photo spots for the school festival. Create a photogenic space.
- Ideas for exhibits recommended for school culture festivals. Film screenings, too.
- [Cute Prizes] Handmade Prize Ideas for School Culture Festivals
Juice and Soft Drinks (1–10)
Ice Fruit Juice

Ice-no-mi juice is as simple as putting store-bought Ice-no-mi (bite-sized ice cream balls) and Mitsuya Cider together in a glass! It’s super easy yet delicious.
As a variation, you can add canned fruit to make a fruit punch, or try adding jelly of the same flavor.
Since both Ice-no-mi and cider-type sodas come in many flavors, try different combinations to see which Ice-no-mi pairs best with which soda.
We recommend using a sweet, flavored cider rather than a plain one!
Smoothie

How about offering smoothies at your food stall—something popular among health-conscious people? They’re tasty, seem good for the body, and if you put thought into the containers, they’re sure to become a stylish, attractive menu item! To make smoothies, it’s common to blend vegetables or fruits with milk or soy milk, but there are also recipes that mix in ice cream or yogurt.
If you let customers choose their own combinations and make the smoothies right in front of them, the joy of choosing should add to the experience and likely bring in great business!
Juices and soft drinks (11–20)
canned mixed juice

This is a mixed juice that uses canned goods as ingredients.
You can also line up fruit cans like peaches, mandarins, and pineapples at the counter and let customers choose.
Keeping yogurt on hand broadens the options, too.
Of course, you can also serve an assortment straight from the cans without turning it into juice.
Blind taste test of dark juices

Each time, we randomly blend the ingredients and mix them in a juicer.
This act is basically a punishment game where a designated person has to finish the drink.
It’s hard to do on its own, so I think it’s best to try it as an add-on to something else.
Which side? Juice

Heart-pounding and thrilling! Introducing the “Left or Right? Juice” game.
Prepare a variety of ingredients, then ask your guests to pick several by saying “Left or right?” without letting them see the choices.
Put only the selected items into a juicer to make a mixed juice.
It’s exciting not knowing what the final flavor will be! Center your ingredients around fruits and vegetables, but it’s also fine to include a few items that don’t usually go in juice.
Just make sure everything is safe to consume and affordable within your budget!
Games and Food Stalls (1–10)
Target shooting

It’s no exaggeration to say that shooting games are a festival-stall classic.
Players aim at targets like candy using cork guns and the like.
Coming up with creative prizes is the key to making it exciting.
The gun doesn’t have to be a full-fledged cork gun—something easy to get or even handmade is fine.
Super Ball scooping

How about a super ball scooping game that brings back childhood memories? We recommend setting a time limit and giving prizes based on how many balls are scooped.
You could also include some extra-large super balls worth a special 10 points.
It might be a hit with those seasoned pros who honed their super ball scooping skills as kids.



