The Highland Gathering will take place in a town in England for the first time in four years.
The festival, which was started in 1968, honors the rich Scottish heritage and ties of the people of Corby, Northamptonshire.
Since the coronavirus pandemic and the Corby Pole Fair in 2018, it has not been held.
The event, which will take place on Sunday, July 9, on the Charter Field, has organizers stating that they are "urgently seeking" sponsorship due to rising costs.
The Pole Fair only occurs once every 20 years, so in 2022, the town's efforts were concentrated on that occasion.
The Highland Gathering Committee's secretary, Mark Pengelly, stated: "The small committee is putting the finishing touches on this year's gathering after a hiatus in 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic, and in 2022 due to the Corby Pole Fair.
"However, we are struggling to raise enough money to pay the increasing expenses of staging such an event, so we are urgently looking for sponsorship from potential partners to secure the success of this beloved event and its future. ".
Hundreds of residents of the town are Scottish or of Scottish descent as a result of workers migrating there beginning in the 1930s to work in the iron and steel industries, which have largely disappeared.
The town had 61,255 residents as of the 2011 census, and 7,765 of them, or 12 point 7 percent, were born in Scotland.
The competitions for pipe bands and highland dancing are part of the event, which is billed as the largest of its kind held outside of Scotland and draws teams from all over the world.
The show's producers estimated its production costs at around £14,000.