This study examines the effects of experiential marketing and event quality on revisit intention, mediated by visitor satisfaction, in the weekly Huma Betang Night cultural event (Palangka Raya, Indonesia). A quantitative survey of 75 visitors was analyzed using PLS-SEM (SmartPLS 3.0). Results indicate positive, significant paths: experiential marketing → satisfaction (β = 0.392; p < 0.001), event quality → satisfaction (β = 0.404; p < 0.001), satisfaction → revisit intention (β = 0.431; p < 0.001), experiential marketing → revisit intention (β = 0.251; p = 0.002), and event quality → revisit intention (β = 0.262; p = 0.005). Satisfaction partially mediates the effects of experiential marketing (indirect β = 0.169; p = 0.001) and event quality (indirect β = 0.174; p < 0.001) on revisit intention. Model explanatory power is moderate (R² satisfaction = 0.321; R² revisit intention = 0.497). The findings highlight the importance of sensory–affective experiences and service/process quality to strengthen visitor satisfaction and revisit intention in secondary-city cultural night contexts.