Brussels Pride 2026: registrations for Pride Village are open – be part of it!

Brussels Pride is turning 30, the far right is on the rise across Europe, and the official theme says it loud and clear: “Quand les temps s’assombrissent, nous brillons plus fort.” This year, you can do more than march – you can literally shape the Pride experience by joining the Pride Village. Registrations for the stands are now open via an online form, so if you’re running a queer collective, a grassroots group, a bar, a sports club or a cultural project, this is your moment to claim space.​

Pride Village: take up space, visibly

Every year, the Pride Village is where associations, activists, cultural spaces, health organisations and queer‑friendly projects meet the crowd. In a context where anti‑LGBTQIA+ rhetoric and violence are gaining ground – in Belgium as well as abroad – Brussels Pride insists that visibility, solidarity and resistance are the answer. Being present in the Village means:​

  • showing who you are and who you stand for
  • giving visibility to people and issues that are often sidelined
  • meeting a super diverse public IRL, far from the toxicity of social media.

If you want a stand at Pride Village 2026, you can already register online via the official form: register for Pride Village.​

Read also : Thirty Years of Belgian Pride: What Now?

A Pride that refuses to go backwards

The 2026 theme is a direct response to what’s happening around us: Prides restricted or threatened in Hungary, renewed attacks on trans rights in the UK and the US, bans on gender‑affirming care, and a wave of sexist, anti‑LGBTQIA+ hate speech fuelled by masculinist spheres online. Brussels Pride reminds us that legal rights are not enough if mindsets don’t change and if the streets, schools and sports clubs remain unsafe for many queer and trans people.​

As the capital of Belgium and Europe, Brussels has a responsibility to fight intersecting discriminations and to adapt laws and policies to effectively tackle hate speech – online and offline. Pride Village is one of the places where these struggles become visible: you’ll find stands representing trans, intersex and refugee communities, groups working on mental health, HIV prevention, safer nightlife, queer sports, sex‑positivity and more.​

Read also : 2026 Global & European Pride Calendar: Dates & Destinations

From laws to lived realities

For 30 years, Brussels Pride has been shining a light on those who are invisibilised, demanding safety, health, family rights and protection for all. The message for 2026 is simple: rights written in law don’t mean much if people still feel unsafe holding hands in the street, being out at school, or existing as trans, intersex or queer refugees.​

By joining Pride Village – whether you’re a tiny collective or a bigger organisation – you’re helping turn political statements into lived experience. You’re offering info, support, resources, or just a friendly face and a place to rest and connect on a hectic day.​

How to join the Pride Village

Ready to bring your project to Brussels Pride 2026?

When times get darker, we shine brighter – on the streets, on the stages, and in the Pride Village.

KET Magazine is a community‑driven, non‑profit magazine run by volunteers based in Brussels. Get in touch to share your thoughts or tell us about your activities. You can also promote your events on our website or support our work with a donation. Contact us at Info@ket.brussels.

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