News / Eurovision Song Contest 2023

Council spent £70.42 on failed bid to bring Eurovision to Bristol

By Alex Seabrook  Monday Aug 22, 2022

Bristol City Council spent only £70.42 on a failed bid to bring the Eurovision song contest to the city next year.

The annual contest will be hosted in the UK in May 2023, but Bristol has not secured a place on the recently announced shortlist. Mayor Marvis Rees told BBC Radio Bristol earlier this month that he was “very disappointed for the city”.

A recent freedom of information request has now revealed that the council spent £50 on making a video for the bid and £20.42 on travel expenses.

Independent journalism
is needed now More than ever
Keep our city's journalism independent. Become a supporter member today.

The video, made by an external videographer, was ultimately not used due to licensing issues.

The small cost of £70.42 is much smaller than what some other cities have spent in their bids to host Eurovision.

Aberdeen City Council committed to spend a staggering £30,000 of taxpayers’ money on their bid, but also ended up not making the shortlist of host cities.

A Bristol City Council spokesperson said: “Working with key city partners like YTL Arena Bristol, we tabled a serious bid from our global city at a minimal cost to council tax payers. Ukrainians were at the heart of Bristol’s bid, and we continue to support them as a proud city of sanctuary.”

Bristol would have hosted Eurovision at the new YTL Arena under construction at the Brabazon Hangars in Filton. The council previously faced questions about its ability to host the contest there, as the arena is not due to open until 2024 – a year after the contest. A bespoke venue would have been created to host the song contest, if Bristol were chosen.

Queen performed to an audience of 100 people two years before the space is set to be transformed into a 17-000 capacity arena – photo: Betty Woolerton

Speaking on the radio earlier in August, Rees said: “We’re disappointed but we continue to be ambitious for the city, and ambitions come with knockbacks. But it’s experience, and now we’ve been through it, we’re in a better position to pursue our ambitions with Bristol in the future.”

The seven cities which did make the shortlist are Birmingham, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle and Sheffield, with a final decision due in autumn.

The UK will host the contest on behalf of this year’s winners Ukraine due to the ongoing war there.

Main photo: Grimshaw Architects

Read more: Those leading Bristol’s Eurovision bid confident the city is ‘ideal host’

Our top newsletters emailed directly to you
I want to receive (tick as many as you want):
I'm interested in (for future reference):
Marketing Permissions

Bristol24/7 will use the information you provide on this form to be in touch with you and to provide updates and marketing. Please let us know all the ways you would like to hear from us:

We will only use your information in accordance with our privacy policy, which can be viewed here - www.bristol247.com/privacy-policy/ - you can change your mind at any time by clicking the unsubscribe link in the footer of any email you receive from us, or by contacting us at meg@bristol247.com. We will treat your information with respect.


We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By clicking below to subscribe, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing. Learn more about Mailchimp's privacy practices here.

Bristol24/7 is an independent media outlet and community interest company. We're not owned by a large corporation and your contribution will help keep it this way. It will also help us grow and improve our content. By supporting us you will:
  • Support young people, charities and environmental projects in Bristol
  • Shape a Better Bristol
  • Enjoy exclusive perks
  • Comment on articles

Related articles

Choose payment frequency
Choose payment method
Credit/Debit
Apple Pay
Google Pay
By signing up to become a member you agree to our privacy policy and terms & conditions.
Fill in this form or email partnerships@bristol247.com and a member of the team will be in touch.
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Independent journalism
is needed now More than ever
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Join the Better
Business initiative
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
* prices do not include VAT
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Enjoy delicious local
exclusive deals
You've read %d articles this month
Consider becoming a member today
Wake up to the latest
Get the breaking news, events and culture in your inbox every morning