Boise Pride 2026: Your Complete Guide to Idaho's Biggest Pride
Everything you need for Boise Pride 2026 — the Sept 18–20 festival at Ann Morrison Park, the parade, gay bars, where to stay, and insider tips.
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Subscribe NowDon't let anyone tell you Idaho doesn't do Pride. Boise Pride is the biggest LGBTQ+ celebration in the state — a three-day, tens-of-thousands-strong festival that fills Ann Morrison Park with music, drag, and defiant joy every September. In a red state, in a genuinely beautiful high-desert river city, Boise's queer community throws a party that's grown for nearly four decades, and its 2026 theme says it all: "Louder Than Fear."
This is your complete guide to Boise Pride 2026 — when and where everything happens, what to expect across the weekend, where the city's gay bars are, what else to do in a surprisingly cool little capital, and where to stay so you're walkable to it all. First time in Boise or a Treasure Valley regular, here's how to do Pride weekend right.
Boise Pride 2026 Overview
- What it is: A three-day festival at Ann Morrison Park with multiple stages, a vendor market, drag, a parade, and headline entertainment — the largest LGBTQ+ event in Idaho.
- Dates: Friday–Sunday, September 18–20, 2026. Theme: "Louder Than Fear."
- Friday, Sept 18: A ticketed opening night — a big concert-and-drag party with national headliners to launch the weekend.
- Saturday, Sept 19: The main festival day at Ann Morrison Park (free entry before 6 PM), with stages, vendors, and community.
- Sunday, Sept 20: Free all-day festivities, plus the Pride Parade (recent years step off around 10 AM) through downtown.
- Where: Ann Morrison Park, the big riverside park just southwest of downtown Boise.
- Who runs it: Boise Pride, the nonprofit behind Idaho's largest Pride celebration.
Boise Pride is warm, scrappy, and proud in the truest sense — a community that has kept showing up and getting bigger even as Idaho's politics have gotten harder. That context is exactly why the weekend feels so meaningful; this isn't a corporate Pride, it's a statement.
The Boise Pride Festival at Ann Morrison Park
The heart of the weekend is the festival at Ann Morrison Park — a sprawling, 150-plus-acre green space along the Boise River, just a short walk or ride from downtown. Across Saturday and Sunday it fills with multiple stages of live music and drag, a big vendor market of local makers and LGBTQ+ businesses, community and health resource booths, food trucks, a family area, and beer gardens.
The admission model is worth understanding so you can plan: the Friday opening night is ticketed (it's a headliner concert), Saturday is free before 6 PM (with the evening's main-stage show ticketed), and Sunday is free all day. Buying the Friday and Saturday-night tickets ahead through boisepridefest.org is cheaper and faster than the gate — and it funds a volunteer-run community festival.
Pro Tip
The free windows — Saturday daytime and all of Sunday — are when the festival feels most like a giant community picnic, and they're perfect if you're bringing family or watching your budget. If you want the headliner concerts, grab the Friday and Saturday-night tickets in advance; they're the priciest, busiest, and best-produced parts of the weekend.
The Boise Pride Parade
Sunday brings the Boise Pride Parade, one of the most joyful mornings on the Idaho calendar. In recent years it's stepped off around 10 AM and wound through downtown Boise toward the park — a long, loud procession of community groups, drag performers, families, faith groups, motorcycle clubs, and just about every corner of the Treasure Valley's LGBTQ+ community and its allies. (Confirm the exact route and step-off time on the official schedule closer to the weekend.)
Downtown Boise is compact and the sidewalks fill up, so it's an easy, festive parade to watch. Grab a coffee, find a curb, and then follow the crowd back to Ann Morrison Park for the free Sunday festivities.
Pro Tip
Boise's downtown is small and very walkable, so you can catch the parade and be back at the festival within minutes. Post up near the parade's end or along the main downtown stretch, then walk the few blocks over to Ann Morrison Park — you won't need a car all weekend if you stay downtown.
Nearly Four Decades of Idaho Pride
Boise Pride has been around far longer than most people expect. Now in its 37th year, it has grown from a small gathering into the largest LGBTQ+ event in Idaho, drawing tens of thousands to Ann Morrison Park each September. That longevity matters: this is a Pride that has persisted — and expanded — through decades of a deeply conservative political climate, including very public fights over its right to exist.
The 2026 theme, "Louder Than Fear," is a direct response to that. Boise Pride has repeatedly faced pressure, funding threats, and controversy, and every year the community answers by showing up bigger and louder. For visitors, that gives the weekend a genuine sense of stakes and solidarity you don't always feel at a big-city Pride — you're not just at a party, you're standing with a community that has had to fight for it. It's one of the most quietly moving Prides in the country.
It's also a reminder that showing up matters. Travel dollars from out-of-state visitors help sustain a festival that operates on thin margins and volunteer labor, and a bigger crowd is itself the point — the whole ethos of "Louder Than Fear" is that visibility and numbers are how a community answers pressure. So if you're deciding between a splashy coastal Pride and a smaller one in a red state, know that Boise is exactly the kind of place where your presence counts for more.
Best Gay Bars & Nightlife in Boise
Boise's queer nightlife is small but mighty, and it's all downtown — which makes Pride weekend easy to navigate.
Boise's Gay Bars & LGBTQ+ Spaces
The Balcony Club is Boise's beloved main gay bar — a downtown institution with drag shows, a dance floor, and a big outdoor balcony over the Capital City Public Market. The Mode Lounge is the sleeker cocktail-and-dance spot a few blocks away, and Humpin' Hannah's brings the rowdy live-music-and-dancing energy. By day, Flying M Coffee is the legendary queer-friendly downtown coffeehouse that's been an unofficial community living room for decades, and The Community Center (TCC) is Boise's LGBTQ+ hub for programs and resources year-round. Everything is within a few walkable downtown blocks.
Where to Eat & Grab Coffee
Downtown Boise punches well above its weight for food, and it's all a short walk from the bars and the park. Fuel your mornings at Flying M Coffee or Broadcast Coffee, two of the city's most-loved independent roasters and easy pre-parade rally points. For meals, the Basque Block is the can't-miss move — lamb, croquetas, and Rioja you won't find anywhere else in the West — while downtown proper and the nearby Freak Alley area are packed with breweries, taco spots, and farm-to-table restaurants. On Saturday mornings, the Capital City Public Market (right below the Balcony Club) fills the streets with local produce and food stalls. You will not go hungry in Boise.
Downtown Boise: Cooler Than You Think
Part of the fun of Boise Pride is discovering how genuinely great downtown Boise is. It's compact, tree-lined, mountain-backed, and packed with more character than a city this size has any right to:
- The Basque Block — Boise is home to one of the largest Basque communities outside of Spain, a legacy of the sheepherders who settled here generations ago, and this downtown block celebrates it with restaurants, the Basque Museum & Cultural Center, and the historic Cyrus Jacobs-Uberuaga boarding house. Get the croquetas, a glass of Rioja, and a plate of lamb; it's a genuinely unique bit of culture you won't find anywhere else in the American West, and it's right in the middle of the Pride footprint.
- Freak Alley Gallery — the largest outdoor mural gallery in the Northwest, an ever-changing open-air maze of street art right downtown.
- The Idaho State Capitol — a gleaming, geothermally-heated statehouse you can walk right into, a few blocks from the bars.
- The Boise River Greenbelt — 25 miles of riverside path threading through the city and right past Ann Morrison Park; rent a bike or just walk it.
Pro Tip
If the weather's warm, do the quintessential Boise thing: float the Boise River. You can rent a raft or tube and drift the mellow stretch that ends near Ann Morrison Park — a perfect, only-in-Boise way to spend a Pride-weekend afternoon before the evening's festivities.
Where to Stay for Boise Pride
Stay downtown so you can walk to the bars, the parade, and (nearly) to the festival — Ann Morrison Park is under a mile from the downtown hotels. Here's where to base yourself.
Stay Downtown (Walkable to Pride)
All three of these put you in the walkable downtown core, close to the nightlife and within about a mile of Ann Morrison Park.
- Inn at 500 Capitol — an upscale boutique hotel on Capitol Blvd, the closest of the downtown hotels to Ann Morrison Park, with a cozy, design-forward feel.
- The Grove Hotel — downtown's full-service landmark hotel, attached to the arena and Boise Centre, with a spa and pool.
- Hotel 43 — a stylish boutique hotel right in the middle of downtown, walkable to the Basque Block, Freak Alley, and the gay bars.
Airbnb & Vacation Rentals
Downtown Boise and the nearby North End (a leafy historic neighborhood) both have rentals that work well for a group. Stay near downtown to be walkable to everything, and book early — mid-September is popular, and Boise State football weekends can tighten availability.
Getting There & Getting Around
Flying in: Boise Airport (BOI) is remarkably close — about a 10–15 minute drive from downtown — with nonstop flights from a growing list of Western and national hubs. Rideshares are quick and cheap from the terminal.
Driving in: Boise sits right on I-84. It's a scenic road trip from much of the Northwest and Mountain West — roughly 5.5 hours from Salt Lake City, 6 from Portland, and 7 from Seattle.
Getting around: Downtown Boise is flat, compact, and very walkable, and Ann Morrison Park is a short walk, bike, or rideshare away. If you stay downtown, you can do the whole weekend without a car.
Pro Tip
Mid-September in Boise is high-desert perfect but has a big daily temperature swing — sunny, dry days in the 70s–low 80s°F, then evenings that drop into the 50s. Bring sunscreen and water for the daytime festival, and a real jacket for the night concerts and the walk between bars; the desert cools off fast after dark.
Make a Weekend of It
Boise is a fantastic little basecamp, so build in an extra day:
- Float the Boise River — the signature summer-into-early-fall Boise activity, ending near Ann Morrison Park.
- The Basque Block & the Capitol — do the two together for a compact, only-in-Boise afternoon of culture and history.
- Bogus Basin — the mountain rec area just 45 minutes up the hill, with hiking, biking, and views over the Treasure Valley.
- The North End & Hyde Park — Boise's most charming historic neighborhood, great for a coffee-and-stroll morning.
- Wine country — the Snake River Valley wineries are an easy day trip if you want to make it a boozy long weekend.
Between the river, the mountains, the Basque food, and one of the most heartfelt Prides in the country, Boise makes a genuinely great long weekend — and September is one of the best times of year to visit.
When is Boise Pride 2026?
Boise Pride runs Friday–Sunday, September 18–20, 2026, at Ann Morrison Park. The theme is "Louder Than Fear." Friday is a ticketed opening night; Saturday's festival is free before 6 PM; and Sunday is free all day, with the Pride Parade in the morning.
Where is Boise Pride held?
At Ann Morrison Park, the large riverside park just southwest of downtown Boise (under a mile from the downtown hotels and nightlife). The parade runs through downtown Boise.
Is Boise Pride free?
Partly. Saturday before 6 PM is free, and Sunday is free all day — so you can do a lot of the festival without a ticket. The Friday opening night and the Saturday-night main-stage concert are ticketed (headliner shows), sold in advance through boisepridefest.org. The parade is free to watch.
Is there a Boise Pride parade?
Yes — the Boise Pride Parade is held on the festival weekend (recent years, Sunday morning around 10 AM), winding through downtown Boise. Confirm the exact route and time on the official schedule closer to the event.
Where are the gay bars in Boise?
Boise's LGBTQ+ nightlife is all downtown. The Balcony Club is the main gay bar (drag, dancing, a big balcony), The Mode Lounge is the sleeker cocktail spot, and Humpin' Hannah's brings live music and dancing. By day, Flying M Coffee is the queer-friendly community coffeehouse, and The Community Center (TCC) is Boise's LGBTQ+ resource hub.
Where should I stay for Boise Pride?
Stay downtown to be walkable to the bars, the parade, and Ann Morrison Park (under a mile away). The Inn at 500 Capitol is the upscale boutique pick closest to the park, The Grove Hotel is the full-service downtown landmark, and Hotel 43 is a stylish, central boutique option.
What's the weather like for Boise Pride?
Mid-September in Boise is high-desert lovely with a big day-to-night swing: sunny, dry days in the 70s–low 80s°F, dropping into the 50s after dark. Bring sunscreen and water for the daytime festival and a jacket for the evening concerts.
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Robbie S.
I'm Robbie, the founder of Out x Out. I'm from Minneapolis, though I'm spending 2026 building this community from the road — somewhere between South America and Asia. The idea for Out x Out came from a trip to Berlin, where the gay nightlife calendar was years ahead of ours: you could see not just where to go out, but which night to go — so naturally I wanted that kind of insider info for every city in the US (and beyond... eventually). I'm more of a behind-the-scenes type, but the whole point of this is connection: I'd take one real one over a hundred surface-level ones, and I'm trying to build that for the community, city by city.
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