He is the patron saint of Valencia (the remains of one of his arms are in the Imperial School of Orphaned Children of San Vicente) and, although his feast day is on April 5, his solemnity and popular feast are celebrated on the Monday following the second Sunday of Easter of Resurrection. During the week of Easter, some towns take the opportunity to raise the stages or popular altars where children represent the Miracles, which are a small theatrical pieces in which the miracles of the saint are staged, which are represented in Valencian and have a marked didactic and hagiographic character that makes them culminate with some moral lesson. The Vicentine collectives that mount the altars are also called altars, and constitute the basis of a whole associative fabric of long tradition, which is mainly responsible for keeping the festival alive and its intergenerational transmission.

The celebration of Easter has a popular character, which is manifested in the survival of traditional games, gatherings of friends and family, the take-off of catxirulos and the ritual consumption of sweets, such as monas and panous, or the typical sausage.

The most important events of the second weekend of Easter are the wreath to the saint at his birthplace on Carrer del Mar and the procession in which the procession visits the Vicente places and ends at the Church of Sant Esteve, where he was baptized. Precisely around the baptismal font are exhibited those days the bults of San Vicente, which are sculptures of cardboard stone that represent the characters who were in the baptism of San Vicente Ferrer, and who are dressed in the fashion of the fifteenth century. In addition, it is worth noting the rise and fall of the image of the saint on each altar as an especially intense and emotional moment.

The Vicentina festival continues with the Festa dels Xiquets del Carrer de Sant Vicent. It is celebrated on the first Monday of June. It receives its name from the participation of a large number of young children. It is a very old festival that commemorates the first place occupied in the city by the School of Orphaned Children of San Vicente Ferrer, legacy of the congregation of the Beguins that he organized to take care of orphaned children who were abandoned in the streets to the charity of Christians.