
A ticket to the fair will get fans into the grandstands for each concert on Aug. 1, 2, and 3, but closer seating is available, and those reserved tickets go on sale Friday, April 25
Stay A Little Longer at the Clark County Fair.
Move It On Over to the Clark County Fair.
And don’t worry if there is Dust In The Wind at the Clark County Fair.
The “Best 10 Days of Summer” are Aug. 1 through 10 with the 2025 Clark County Fair, and this week, organizers announced the fair’s headline concerts at the Toyota Grandstands. Tickets go on sale Friday, April 25.

Country act Brothers Osborne, with hits such as “Stay A Little Longer” and “Young Me” will be the main musical event on opening night of the fair, Friday Aug. 1.

George Thorogood and The Destroyers return to Clark County on Saturday, Aug. 2. They will bring their traditional rock/blues rhythms, rockabilly energy, and grooves with fan-favorite hits such as “Bad To The Bone” and “Move It On Over.”

And on Sunday, Aug 3, Kansas comes to Washington.
Kansas has been described as America’s legendary rock band, selling more than 30 million albums in 52 years in the business. Their biggest hits include “Dust In The Wind” and “Carry On Wayward Son.”
Regular fair admission provides general concert access. But fans who want a closer spot to the stage can opt for reserved seating, which is $30 to $40 per person.
Tickets go on sale Friday at https://www.clarkcoeventcenter.com/p/tickets
The concert series is sponsored by Your Party Center.
The grandstands will also have other big promotions to round out the 10-day fair. Those are typically rodeo events and motorsports. The Clark County Fair will announce that schedule at a later date.
Also read:
- Evergreen Habitat for Humanity raises funds for 132nd Cottage Homes ProjectEvergreen Habitat’s Taste of Home event raised over $120,000 for 32 affordable cottage homes in Vancouver.
- Commission on Aging to discuss implementation of ADA transportation standards in smaller citiesTransportation engineers from Battle Ground and Ridgefield will address ADA compliance challenges facing smaller cities.
- Letter: Congress quietly advances U.S.-Israel military integration through NDAA – Section 224Justin Forsman calls for public debate on NDAA Section 224 and U.S.-Israel military technology integration.
- AGO memo says ‘realistic possibility’ a wealth tax would be overturnedA March 2025 AGO memo warns a wealth tax’s $50M threshold exemption risks violating Washington’s uniformity clause.
- Opinion: Governor Ferguson warns of upcoming shortfall after years of overspendingWashington’s $80.2B budget grew more than twice as fast as population and inflation combined since 2013.
- Opinion: High stakes, hidden electionFive Washington Supreme Court seats are on the 2026 ballot — shaping income tax law, pension raids, and sheriff authority.
- Opinion: Transportation officials may be pivoting as costs explode on interstate bridge replacementRail’s share of the I-5 bridge budget may be far larger than the 14% figure officials are citing.








