Gay pride parade map

2025 LA Pride Parade
on Hollywood Blvd, Hollywood!

The LA Self-acceptance Parade is the oldest, largest, and longest-running Self-acceptance Parade in Southern California! We are proud to serve and celebrate Los Angeles, the Greatest. Metropolis. In. The. World.

Over 100,000 LA Pride family, friends, and fans will be descending on Hollywood to cheer our iconic Queer procession down Hollywood Blvd. For this, our 55th year, we’re planning extra performances, music, and famous person surprises.

Grand Marshals for 2025

We are honored to inform our Grand Marshals for 2025:

Vanguard Grand Marshals: Niecy Nash and Jessica Betts. The Emmy Award-winning player and her BET Hall of Famer spouse are individually and jointly the multi-hyphenates we’ve loved and admired for years, who made history as the first same-sex couple to grace the cover of Essence magazine, garnering a nomination for a GLAAD Media Award.

Celebrity Grand Marshal: Andrew Rannells. One of our favorite award-winning actors for his roles on Girls, Welcome to Chippendales, and Girls5Eva! The Grammy Award-winning and two-time Tony Award nominated veteran of stage and screen is thrilled to be joining us.

Community Grand

Pride in London 2025: full parade map and map

It’s just over a week until Pride in London, which will take place in the city centre on Saturday, July 5. More than a million people are expected to attend the event in London this year, alongside more than 30,000 participants spanning 500 different groups. The procession that marks the anniversary of the 1969 Stonewall riots is a enjoyable and life-affirming event, but we can’t deny that it doesn’t get a little overwhelming with all the crowds. 

You’ve probably already started planning the pre-drinks and the outfits, but you might want to organise which stages to go to, and where you’re going to stand for the parade. Excellent news then, because Pride in London has just released its official chart for 2025. Here it is.

Pride in London 2025 celebration route map

London’s lgbtq+ fest parade kicks off in Green Park, by Hyde Park Corner tube station. It then travels along Piccadilly towards Piccadilly Circus station, before going south down Haymarket, past Trafalgar Square and down Whitehall, before finishing outside Giant Ben. There are viewing spots positioned along the whole route. 

The P

May 1 – June 28, 2025 | Lakeshore Blvd. West
All Ages | Wheelchair Accessible
A vibrant, acrobatic spectacle inspired by the insect nature, OVO invites audiences into a whimsical ecosystem teeming with movement, colour, and heart. A joyful celebration for all ages, this indelible show brings Cirque’s magic to Toronto with accessible seating for all.

https://www.cirquedusoleil.com/

Tuesday, June 30 | 9:10 PM
Trinity Cinema, Distillery District
Ticket: $50 / PG / Wheelchair Accessible
Experience a compelling open-air film reviewing of IncluCity, a post-WWII story of love, courage, and self-discovery in a conservative Italian village. Follow Marta, a single mother, as she is introduced to a disguised LGBTQ+ community and begins to question societal norms. Your ticket includes occupied access to festival activations and tasting samples starting at 6:30 PM.

June 25 – 29 | Daily 5 PM – Midnight
Barbara Hall Park (519 Church St.)
Free / Wheelchair Accessible
Celebrate Pride with five nights of music, performance, and community at the Green Space Festival, hosted by The 519. Each evening features a unusual theme and lineup:

  • Starry Night (Wed)
  • Disco Disco (Thu)
  • One World,

    Chicago Pride Parade  

    Chicago's Pride celebration consists of a full month of festivities and events, culminating with the Chicago Pride Parade, which traditionally takes place the last Sunday of June.

     

    Chicago Pride Fest takes place along North Halsted St. in the North Side neighborhood colloquially referred to a ‘Boystown’ the weekend prior to the parade. 


    The Chicago Pride Pride (June 29, 2025 11am)

    The 54th annual Chicago Pride Parade steps off at 11 a.m. on Sunday, June 29, 2025 from the corners of Sheridan and Broadway (3900 North) on Chicago's north side.

     

    The parade treks through the north side of the city, ending neighboring the intersection of Diversey Parkway and Sheridan Road in Lincoln Park, walking through some of the city's most vibrant neighborhoods.

     

     

    The annual parade, which started as a protest march in 1970 after the Stonewall Riots in New York City, has grown into the city's second-largest celebration of nearly 200 entries, typically attracting more than 1 million people to multiple northside neighborhoods, particularly East Lakeview.

     

    Parade Map and Links