FEBS Congress History

The FEBS Congress for advancing molecular life sciences

One of the primary goals of FEBS when it was founded in 1964 was to facilitate European meetings in biochemistry, and indeed its ‘1st Meeting’ was held that year in London with an international mix of speakers and over 1000 attendees. Building on this success, a similar ‘Meeting’ was then organized in turn by different member Societies of FEBS in the following years, each Society and the event’s city and country bringing a unique flavour to the gathering.

Notably, the Meetings were held both in Western Europe and in Central and Eastern Europe during the times of the iron curtain, and an openness to reach most corners of the FEBS geographical area continued in subsequent years. Before 2004, some years were skipped or had alternative narrower meetings to make way for the triennial conferences of the International Union of Biochemistry (IUB; later IUBMB), but for the past over 20 years the event has been planned annually, with FEBS collaborating with IUBMB every few years for a joint meeting. FEBS also joined forces with EMBO in 2014. From 2004, the ‘Meeting’ took the grander title of ‘Congress’.

Over the 60 years since the first FEBS scientific event, Congress topics have expanded to a wider spectrum of molecular and cellular life science research, physical slides and overheads in lecture rooms have been replaced by stylish ppts and fancy animations, a printed abstract book is now superseded by a mobile app, and the event has become more global. But core elements remain: for the milestone 50th edition, we still look forward to gathering together face to face in a special location in the European area to understand, explain and be excited by new developments in our own area of expertise and the wider field, and to share all this with our fellow researchers from many different countries.

Marking the milestone 50th FEBS Congress

The new FEBS Rita Levi-Montalcini medal

Starting at the 50th FEBS Congress, FEBS is delighted to announce that a new medal with an associated Congress plenary lecture will join the award portfolio of FEBS, named in honour of an inspiring female researcher of the past: Rita Levi-Montalcini (1909–2012). The FEBS Rita Levi-Montalcini medal will be awarded for outstanding achievements in biochemistry and molecular biology or related areas, with an emphasis on work on the molecular basis of disease or treatment. The recipient will be a researcher of any gender who is active in European research and resident in Europe and/or a FEBS country.

The new FEBS medal will be awarded for the first time at the 50th FEBS Congress, to Nobel laureate Emmanuelle Charpentier. Catch the medal presentation ahead of her lecture on ‘Transforming life sciences through the power of microbiology’ on 8 July 2026.

To find out more about the new medal and Rita Levi-Montalcini, see the news post here.

A poster exhibition of past FEBS Congresses

FEBS Congresses are hosted in turn by member Societies of FEBS (the national biochemistry and molecular biology Societies that belong to the Federation). To pay tribute to their hosting role, and to provide an interesting display to participants at the milestone 50th FEBS Congress, FEBS has invited FEBS Societies to prepare a poster on a previous FEBS Congress held in their country. Several Societies have taken up the challenge, some of whom have hosted more than one Congress, and we look forward to seeing the results in Maastricht. What will be the oldest Congress represented? What were the hot research topics 20 years ago? Have conferences really changed that much over the years? We look forward to finding out!

ATTEND THE
FEBS CONGRESS

Registration will open
in late 2025

IMPORTANT DATES

YSF Abstract Submission deadline:
Wednesday, 10 December 2025, 23:59 CET

Registration

Regular registration deadline:
10 June 2026

Abstract Submissions

Regular submissions closed

Outcome notification to submitters: Early April 2026

Late Abstract Submissions
Late-breaking submissions closed

Poster acceptance notifications to submitters: mid-May 2026

Abstract Submissions

Regular submissions closed

Outcome notification to submitters: Early April 2026

Early registration fee deadline for presenters: 14 April 2026, 23:59 CEST

Late Abstract Submissions
Posters only

Submission & registration deadline extension: Wednesday, 22 April 2026, 12:00 CEST

Poster acceptance notifications to submitters: mid-May 2026

N.B. Submissions received after the deadline dates will not be considered for the applicable abstract phase.

FEBS Young Scientists’ Forum 2026
2 – 4 July 2026

The FEBS Congress 2026
4 – 8 July 2026

Early bird registration deadline
TBC

Late breaking abstracts submission deadline
TBC

FEBS has twin commitments to high-quality publications and the promotion of molecular biosciences. As a charitable academic organization, FEBS uses income from the journals of FEBS Press to fund its diverse activities, including support for the FEBS Congress.