The 2026 Capital Pride Parade and Festival has been pushed back because its initial dates conflict with America’s 250th birthday celebrations.
The 2026 Capital Pride Parade and Festival has been pushed back because its initial dates conflicted with America’s 250th birthday celebrations.
The festival will now be held from June 12 to 21. With the parade scheduled for Saturday, June 20 and the festival and concert on Sunday, June 21.
“For over a decade, Capital Pride has taken place during the second weekend in June, but in 2026, we are shifting our dates in response to the city’s capacity due to major events and preparations for the 250th anniversary of the United States,” festival organizers said in a news release.
“As we look ahead to 2026, we’re transforming the legacy of WorldPride into a rallying cry, demanding visibility, defending our rights, and organizing for the safety and freedom of our community,” said Ryan Bos, CEO and President of the Capital Pride Alliance, in the announcement.
The “Pride Reveal” will be scheduled at the end of February, where the theme for the festival and parade will be announced.
Registration has opened for organizations, artisans and businesses to apply to participate. Food vendor applications will open in January.
“Our Pride events thrive because of the passion and support of the community,” said Anna Jinkerson, CPA Board Chair, in the release.
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Orlando’s annual Come Out With Pride celebrations return in all their glory this weekend, pushing back against intolerance in our state and national governments. This time-honored tradition for Orlando’s LGBTQ+ community has served as a way to honor love, authenticity and empowerment for over two decades running, and it’s become one of the biggest Pride celebrations in the Southeast.
As a much-needed reminder of the LGBTQ+ community’s right to thrive and exist both locally and nationally, Orlandoans will gather for a celebration born out of protest and boldly express unapologetic joy. To make sure you don’t miss out on any of the fun, we’ve compiled a rundown of essential happenings so you won’t miss a minute.
Pride-worthy preludes:
Anthem Orlando downtown kicks off their Come Out With Pride festivities at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 17, with the Official Come Out With Pride Orlando Block Party, featuring DJ Scott Robert. The venue is currently under construction (so it will be a coming-out party for them as well), but plans to move this jamboree to Yaz Orlando next door if not completed in time for Pride. Entry is free with RSVP.
On a more quirky note, the Swirlery on Michigan Street hosts the Get Golden Costume and Pride Weekend Party at 7 p.m. Friday. Expect a Golden Girls-themed costume contest, trivia, an art auction and music. Entry is donation-based.
The big day:
Lake Eola Park becomes the epicenter of Pride festivities starting at noon on Saturday, Oct. 18, with over 250 vendors setting up shop for the Come Out With Pride Festival.
When the clock strikes 1 p.m., Come Out With Pride’s Trans & Non-Binary Task Force takes to the streets, leading their third Trans Rally & March, spotlighting the strength and resilience of the LGBTQ+ community’s most targeted members.
For some live music and dancing, shimmy over to the Sonic Bloom Field starting at 2 p.m., where Grammy-winning DJ Tracy Young, Blue Star and more will bring the disco vibes for maximum dancing.
Later in the afternoon, the Most Colorful Parade kicks off at 4 p.m., with almost 200 supportive organizations and allies marching alongside the LGBTQ+ community young and old in an ecstatic street party. Grand Marshals of this year’s parade include AJ Blount and Britney Thompson of Netflix’s Ultimatum: Queer Love and Jen Cousins of the Florida Freedom to Read Project.
A Pride Rally & Awards Presentation happens at 6:30 p.m. back at Lake Eola Park, followed by an evening of drag and burlesque from 7 p.m. on the nearby Diva Stage. The night features RuPaul’s Drag Race star Jorgeous, Drag Race judge TS Madison and local star Angelica Sanchez.
At 9:30 p.m., the sky over Lake Eola will erupt in a dazzling light show, marking the end of the day’s festivities with a Fireworks Finale. Although these events are free to attend, VIP tickets are available through Come Out With Pride for a more exclusive experience.
But the fun doesn’t have to stop there! The energy of the parade lives on at the downtown Pride Block Party taking over Anthem, Yaz and Elixir, presented by One Magical Weekend. Starting at 6 p.m., this bash goes on until the wee hours with sets from DJ Jay Warren and DJ Liza Rodriguez, accompanied by striking drag looks from London Adour. General admission tickets are available for $28.36 and VIP tickets for $65.64.
Afterparties and weekend events:
Savoy in Ivanhoe Village keeps the party going on-site all day Saturday, Oct. 18, starting at 11 a.m., with drag, drink specials and DJs holding court during the day (and most of the night).
Outpost near Lake Eola hosts Pride Drag Brunches on both Saturday, Oct. 18 — featuring Darcel Stevens, Twila Holiday, Angelica Sanchez and Kitana Gemini — and Sunday, Oct. 19 — featuring Angelica Sanchez, 92Era Lords and Annie Daynow. Both brunches begin at 11 a.m.
On Sunday, Oct. 19, at 11 a.m., you can also indulge in more dining, drinks and live drag at Anthems Official Come Out With Pride Orlando Pride Drag Brunch. Hosted by local drag royalty Darcel Stevens and other luminaries, this limited-seating event costs $50 to attend … if you manage to snag a seat!
Later that same day, Anthem throws the Official Come Out With Pride Closing Party to cap off the weekend. From 2 p.m. to 10 p.m., dance under rainbow lights and relish the final hours of a successful Pride (until next year, of course). The cost of entry is $10-$15.
If you’re still got some more party in you, head (back) over to Savoy for the one-year anniversary of iScream Sundays courtesy of your host Axel Andrews. This Pride-themed event features Willow Pill, winner of Season 14 of RuPaul’s Drag Race, and kicks off at 9 p.m. Tickets start at $24.
Party with a purpose:
In light of the cancellation of Tampa’s 2026 Pride parade, for “current political and economic” reasons, Orlando’s Pride celebrations have become that much more crucial for Central Florida. Since its humble beginnings in 1991, Come Out With Pride in the City Beautiful has gathered a larger turnout each year, combining defiance and joy.
Come Out With Pride reminds us to look back to the prominent LGBTQ+ figures before us and not to give a single inch in the face of intolerance, cruelty and oppression. The rainbow colors of Pride can be painted over on a crosswalk, sure, but the sentiments these colors represent can never be erased!
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‘Rugby is badass. Queer people are even more badass’
Healing and uplifting communities through music and unity is the foundation of this event space created by Zacil “DJ Sizzle Fantastic” Pech and Norma “Normz La Oaxaqueña” Fajardo.
For nearly a decade DJ Sizzle has built a reputation in the queer POC and Spanish-speaking undocumented communities for making the space for them to come together to celebrate their culture and partake in the ultimate act of resistance — joy.
Couples, companions, comadres all dance together on the dancefloor at Cumbiatón. (Photo courtesy of Cumbiatón).
Cumbiatón was created during the first Trump administration as a direct response to the erasure, racism, homophobia and xenophobia that was engrained into the administration’s mission for those first four years. Now that the second Trump administration is upon us, the racism, homophobia, transphobia and xenophobia are tenfold.
This event space is a ‘party for the hood, by the hood.’ It is led by women, queer and trans people of color in every aspect of the production process.
The recent fires that burned through Altadena and Pacific Palisades made DJ Sizzle decide to step back from marketing the event in Los Angeles, an area where people had just lost their businesses, homes and where their lives were completely thrown for a loop.
Now they’re back, doubling-down on their mission to bring cumbias, corridos and all the music many of us grew up listening to, to places that are accessible and safe for our communities.
“I started Cumbiatón back in 2016, right after the election — which was weirdly similar because we’re going through it again. And a lot of us come from the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) movement. We were the ones to really push for that to happen along with the DREAM Act.”
DJ Sizzle says that she wanted to create a space out on the streets to celebrate life and come together, because of how mentally and physically taxing it is to be a part of the marginalized communities that were and still are, a major target for ongoing political attacks.
Edwin Soto and Julio Salgado pose for a photo at a Cumbiaton event in 2024. (Photo courtesy of Cumbiatón).
“We need these spaces so that we can kind of refuel and rejoice in each other’s existence,” said DJ Sizzle. “Because we saw each other out on the street a lot, but never did we really have time to sit down, have a drink, talk, laugh. So I found that music was the way to bring people together and that’s how Cumbiatón got started. It was honestly like a movement of political resistance through music.”
DJ Sizzle is an undocumented community organizer who aims to not only bring awareness to the issues that her communities face, but also to make space to celebrate the wins and bond over the music that brings people in Latin America, East L.A., Boyle Heights and the Bay area together.
Julio Salgado, a queer, visionary artist and migrant rights activist from Ensenada, Baja California with roots in Long Beach and the Bay Area, connected with DJ Sizzle over their shared passion in advocating for immigrant rights.
“Cumbiatón was created during the first [Trump] administration, where you know, a lot of people were really bummed out and so what Sizzle wanted to create was a place where people could come together and celebrate ourselves,” said Salgado. “Fast-forward to the second [Trump] administration and we’re here and feel a little bit more like: ‘oh shit, things are bad again.’ But, things have always been bad.”
Salgado is involved with Cumbiatón through his art. He is a mixed-media artist who creates cartoons using his lived experience with his sobriety journey, undocumented status and queer identity.
With a background in journalism from California State University, Long Beach, Salgado documents what activists do in the undocumented spaces he has been a part of throughout his life.
In 2017, Salgado moved back to Long Beach from the Bay Area, and at the time he started doing political artwork and posters for protests against the first Trump administration, but because the nature of that work can be very tiring, he says that he turned to a more uplifting version of his art where he also draws the joy and unity in his communities.
When he and Sizzle linked up to collaborate during that time, he thought he could use his skills to help uplift this brand and bring it to the forefront of the many events that saturate the party landscape.
DJ Sizzle doing her thing on stage, giving the crowd the music they went looking for. (Photo courtesy of Cumbiatón).
“We are familiar with using the dance floor as a way to kind of put the trauma a little bit away just for one night, get together and completely forget,” said Salgado.
Coming from an undocumented background, Salgado and Sizzle say that their experience with their legal status has made them very aware of how to go about the ID-check process at the door for their events.
“When you’re undocumented, you have something called a [High Security Consular Registration (HSCR)] and it’s kind of like your ID and many of these heterosexual clubs would see that and say it was fake,” said Salgado. “But at the gay club, they didn’t care.”
Just being conscious of what that form of ID looks like and knowing that it’s not fake, helps many of the hundreds of people who come through for Cumbiatón, feel just slightly more at ease.
Edwin Soto, who is another community activist and leader in the undocu-queer community, is also involved in the planning and organizing of the event.
In the long journey of making Cumbiatón what it is now, they say that they have all been very intentional about who they bring in, making sure that whoever they are, they also understand the experience of being undocumented and accepted anyway.
“Something that Sizzle and the team have been very intentional about is making sure that [the security at the door] knows that someone might be using their consulate card,” said Soto.
Bringing together this event space is no easy task, considering the fact that their events are deeply thought out, intentional and inclusive of not just people of color, but also people with differing abilities and people who do not reflect the norm in West Hollywood clubs.
“We created the space that we were longing for that we did not see in West Hollywood,” he said. “[Cumbiatón] is what life could really be like. Where women are not harassed by men. Where people are not body-shamed for what they’re wearing.”
When it comes to their lives outside of Cumbiatón and partying, Sizzle says that it does get exhausting and planning the event gets overwhelming.
“It is really difficult, I’m not going to lie,” said DJ Sizzle. “We are at a disadvantage being queer and being undocumented because this administration triggers us to a point that, anyone who is not a part of those identities or marginalized communities would ever be able to understand,” said Sizzle. “There are times where I’m just like: ‘I’m going to cocoon for a little bit’ and then that affects the marketing and the communication.”
Usually, the events bring in hundreds of people who are looking for community, safety and inclusion. (Photo courtesy of Cumbiatón).
That’s a little bit about what goes on behind the scenes — which really shouldn’t come as a surprise for anyone who is out there fighting for basic human rights, while also making the space to party and enjoy themselves.
“I’m really trying to find balance and honestly my life raft are my friends and my community,” she said. “Like, being able to share, being able to have this plática, and be like ‘bitch, I see you and I know its fucked up, but we got each other.’”
Cumbiatón was made with the purpose of making space to include and invite the many different people in these communities who are otherwise sidelined in broader conversations and in party scenes where they are not as inclusive or thoughtful about their attendees.
“How beautiful is it to be queer and listen to rancheras and to norteñas and cumbia, and to just own it,” said Soto.
To join Cumbiatón at their next party, visit their Instagram page.