| Thessaloniki International Fair Διεθνής Έκθεση Θεσσαλονίκης | |
|---|---|
TIF—HELEXPO logo | |
| Status | Active |
| Genre | Fair, exhibition |
| Date | First week of September |
| Frequency | Annual |
| Venue | HELEXPO Fair Grounds |
| Locations | Thessaloniki,Macedonia |
| Coordinates | 40°37′40″N22°57′19″E / 40.6278°N 22.9554°E /40.6278; 22.9554 |
| Country | Greece |
| Years active | 99 |
| Inaugurated | 1926 |
| Previous event | 7–15 September 2024 |
| Next event | 6–14 September 2025 |
| Participants | 1,500 (2017)[1] |
| Attendance | 263,000 (2017)[2] |
| Area | 180,000 m2 (1,900,000 sq ft) |
| Organised by | HELEXPO |
| Website | www |
TheThessaloniki International Fair (Greek:Διεθνής Έκθεση Θεσσαλονίκης,Diethnis Ekthesi Thessalonikis), abbreviatedTIF (ΔΕΘ), is an annual international exhibition event held inThessaloniki, Greece's second-largest city. It has been held in the first week of September since 1926, and its opening is traditionally marked by a series ofprogrammatical statements by thePrime Minister of Greece. The 2020 fair was cancelled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, the first cancellation sinceWW2.

The International Exhibition & Congress Centre of TIF HELEXPO is located in the YMCA Square in downtown Thessaloniki, with easy access from any location in the city and using any means of transportation.
With trade fairs and consumer exhibitions held throughout the year at exhibition premises of European specifications, it is the most important exhibition organisation agency in Greece.At the heart of the city's history, adjacent to the Byzantine Museum and the Archaeological Museum, the International Exhibition Centres of TIF HELEXPO attract a wealth of conference events.
The TIF HELEXPO Exhibition Centre covers a total area of 180,000 sq.m., of which 62,000 sq.m. are indoor exhibition areas, distributed into a complex of 17 pavilions that are functionally designed and interconnected to serve the needs of each event. The exhibition facilities are complemented by conference centres, parking areas, sports and recreational facilities, catering areas, citizen service centres, museums, banks and developmental agency offices. This way, Thessaloniki International Exhibition Centre functions as a hub providing services that successfully meet the requirements of exhibitions, conferences and cultural events.[3][4][5]
Similar trade fairs of the city have occurred regularly since theByzantine era, attracting traders from all over theBalkans.[6]
It has been customary for the country's prime minister to set out his government's policies for each coming year in a speech at the annual Thessaloniki International Trade Fair, and for this reason the event has political significance in addition to its commercial importance.[7][8]
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