Brussels Pride is back on Saturday 16 May 2026, and this year’s edition carries the weight of a milestone: 30 years of Pride in Brussels. Around 200,000 people are expected in the capital for a week of queer visibility, protest, celebration and collective care under the theme “When Times Get Darker, We Shine Brighter.”
Read also : Brussels Pride: from Gay Pride to Belgian Pride to a city that owns its colors
That slogan, chosen by RainbowHouse Brussels, says everything about the mood of the moment. In a world where LGBTQIA+ rights are still being challenged, Brussels Pride is framing itself not just as a party, but as a reminder that queer communities are still here, still organising, and still refusing to disappear.

A Pride with a political pulse
The Pride March will leave the Mont des Arts on Saturday afternoon, while the Pride Village will gather associations and institutions at the same site. The City of Brussels says the official gathering starts from noon, with the march launching after speeches, and the whole day meant to turn the city centre into a visible statement of LGBTQIAP+ rights.
Read also : 2026 Global & European Pride Calendar: Dates & Destinations
This is not a ceremonial anniversary. It is a public demonstration, and the language matters: the anniversary is being presented as 30 years of struggle, pride and visibility, not as a neat commemorative moment sealed in glitter.

Pride Week takes over the city
The celebration stretches across Pride Week, with around twenty events in Brussels, including concerts, screenings, performances and workshops at places like Les Grands Carmes and RainbowHouse Brussels.

The programme also begins before the main march. The Mini-Pride opens the weekend on Thursday 14 May at 17:30 in the Saint-Jacques district, with a pass-by at the Manneken-Pis, who will wear a costume created for the occasion.
That playful detail fits a Brussels Pride that knows how to move between political seriousness and camp delight without losing either.
Ixelles joins in
A new event is also joining the Pride map this year: Pride in XL, organised by the commune of Ixelles on Friday 15 May from 17:00 to 23:00 at Place du Luxembourg, right in front of the European Parliament.
The line-up includes DJ VTT, Rokia Bamba, Legolane and Azo, while associations such as Punch Art, Le Refuge LGBTQIA+ and Rainbow Ambassadors will also take the floor. That gives the Pride week a political and community dimension beyond the usual central Brussels route.

Care, safety and access
Brussels Pride 2026 will also deploy a Safer Pride system throughout the day, including a Safer Zone at the Mont des Arts and a mobile Care Team across the route. That matters, because queer celebrations are always more meaningful when they are also safer, more accessible and better able to respond to harm in real time.
Read also : Brussels Pride: Loud Ladies Belgium: Making Room, Making Noise, Making Change
The event is being backed by around 100 partners, associations and artists, which underlines how much of Brussels’ queer infrastructure still depends on the work of collectives, community groups and cultural spaces rather than institutions alone.
Useful links
Brussels Pride – official site
Brussels Pride 2026 at RainbowHouse
Call for projects – Brussels Pride Week 2026

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.
You may also like
-
Why some of us are done handing our data to Americans
More and more people are waking up to a simple idea: if your inbox, cloud
-
Francesca Albanese says sanctions turned her life into a “rollercoaster”
Francesca Albanese, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian
-
Drug-resistant Shigella is rising among gay and bisexual men in England
UK health authorities are warning gay and bisexual men to take extra care and get
-
Bosch Parade: Hieronymus Bosch Reimagined on Water
There are festivals, and then there are public artworks that feel like an entire alternate
-
KET in Paris: Barlone, our queer left-wing Paris crush
There are places that merely fit into a city, and others that save a little piece of
