Part of the Gay Santa Ana Guide — bars, events & things to do.

Saturday, October 10, 2026
Downtown Santa Ana Historic District, Santa Ana, CA
301 E 3rd St, Santa Ana, CA 92701, United StatesThe circuit parties, afterhours and official events happening across OC Pride: Our Voices All Combined in Santa Ana — dates, venues and tickets.
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Orange County does Pride its own way. Instead of a single big-city blowout, OC's celebration lands right in the heart of Downtown Santa Ana, and for 2026 it returns to the streets on Saturday, October 10 — timed to LGBTQ+ History Month — as OC Pride: Our Voices All Combined, a free festival and parade that fills the county seat's historic district with stages, cultural zones, and tens of thousands of people.
This guide has everything you need to make a weekend of it: the festival and parade themselves, Orange County's genuinely fun gay bar scene, the Laguna Beach gay-beach getaway that's long been the soul of queer OC, where to eat, how to get around a car-centric county, and where to stay whether you want to be steps from the festival or toes-in-the-sand down the coast.
At its core, OC Pride is a giant, free, all-day block party in the streets of Downtown Santa Ana — a neighborhood that has been the beating heart of Orange County's LGBTQ+ life for years, and where OC Pride has deep roots. The 2026 edition brings back the full package: a colorful parade winding through the Historic District, multiple stages of live music and drag, cultural zones celebrating the county's diverse communities, vendors, food, and family-friendly activities from late morning until 10 PM.
Because it runs on LGBTQ+ History Month rather than the June crush, OC Pride has a distinct, community-forward feel — less about spectacle, more about the whole county showing up together. And with free general admission, it's one of the easiest big Prides in Southern California to just show up to.
Pro Tip
General admission is free, but downtown Santa Ana parking goes fast on festival day. Take rideshare or arrive early and park in one of the downtown structures rather than circling the closed-off streets. If you want a guaranteed spot and shade, look for the festival's VIP option.
OC's gay nightlife is spread out — this is a county, not a single downtown — but it's real and it's fun, clustered around Santa Ana with a beachy outpost down in Laguna. Santa Ana is the anchor, home to the county's gay bars, and PrideFest Saturday night is when they all come alive.
Queens Lounge and Noa Noa Night Bar & Club bring the Latin-flavored dance energy that defines Santa Ana's scene; The Fling and Mission Bar round out the downtown-adjacent options. Just outside the city, Tin Lizzie Saloon in Costa Mesa is OC's long-running country-western gay bar (line dancing and all), and the Frat House in Garden Grove is a beloved neighborhood mainstay. Down the coast, The Seahorse keeps a gay-friendly flag flying in Laguna Beach.
Pro Tip
Orange County is spread out and rideshares between cities add up. If you plan to bar-hop Santa Ana on Pride night, base yourself downtown so you can walk or take short rides — and save the Laguna trip for a daytime beach day rather than a late-night haul.
No OC Pride weekend is complete without a run down the coast to Laguna Beach, the artist colony that has been the spiritual home of gay Orange County for generations. At the end of West Street sits West Street Beach, the county's historic gay beach — a sun-soaked cove that has been a queer gathering spot for decades and is still where the community lays out its towels.
Laguna's LGBTQ+ history runs deep: for roughly half a century, the legendary Boom Boom Room at the old Coast Inn was one of the West Coast's most famous gay bars and clubs, drawing crowds until it closed in 2007 — a loss still mourned by anyone who danced there. Today the town keeps its welcoming, bohemian character, with tide-pool coves, hillside galleries, and the summer Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters that put it on the cultural map. Beyond West Street Beach, Laguna's coastline is a string of hidden coves — Victoria Beach with its storybook "Pirate Tower," the tide pools at Treasure Island, and the dramatic bluffs of Heisler Park — each a short walk or drive apart along the Pacific Coast Highway. It's a 30-to-45-minute drive from Santa Ana and the perfect antidote to a long festival day.
Grab breakfast or a coffee at Zinc Cafe & Market, do a proper dinner at Mozambique (a longtime gay-favorite with rooftop views and weekend drag brunch) or the celebrated Broadway by Amar Santana, or keep it casual with coastal Mexican at South of Nick's. Then walk it off on the sand.
Orange County is a drive-everywhere kind of place, so where you stay shapes your whole weekend. The two smart plays: base yourself in Santa Ana to be minutes from the festival, or make it a coastal getaway down in Laguna Beach.
Best if the festival is your priority and you want short rides to the downtown nightlife. These sit in the South Coast Metro area near John Wayne Airport, an easy hop from the festival grounds.
Best if you want to pair Pride with a beach weekend. Laguna's inns and resorts put you steps from the coves and West Street Beach, a scenic drive up to Santa Ana for the festival.
Both Santa Ana and the OC beach towns have deep vacation-rental inventory — handy if you're traveling as a group or want a kitchen and more space. Book early for the October Pride window, especially anything walkable in Laguna.
Pro Tip
Can't decide between festival-close and beach? Split the difference: stay in Santa Ana for Pride Saturday, then move down to Laguna for a Sunday beach recovery day before you fly out of John Wayne. It's the classic OC Pride weekend.
Downtown Santa Ana is worth exploring in its own right. The Historic District — anchored by the Artists Village and the shops and taquerias of Fourth Street (Calle Cuatro) — is one of the oldest and most walkable downtowns in Orange County, with a vibrant Latino cultural core and a growing food-and-bar scene. The Bowers Museum is a genuinely good art-and-culture stop a few minutes away, and the district's taquerias and cafes make it an easy place to graze between festival laps. To the north, Anaheim's Center Street Promenade and the food-hall-anchored Anaheim Packing District are worth the short drive if you're extending the weekend around a Disneyland trip.
Beyond Santa Ana, the county fans out into some of Southern California's best-known destinations: the Pacific Coast Highway beach towns from Huntington Beach to Dana Point, the theme-park world of Anaheim and Disneyland to the north, and the coves and canyons of Laguna to the south. It's an easy region to build a long weekend around — Pride on Saturday, beach on Sunday, and a whole coast in between.
The great OC advantage: John Wayne Airport (SNA) sits right in Santa Ana, minutes from the festival, and is served by most major carriers — a genuinely easy fly-in. Los Angeles International (LAX) is about 45 minutes to an hour north if you find a better fare, and Long Beach (LGB) is another nearby option.
Orange County is built for cars, threaded by the I-5, I-405, and CA-55 freeways. If you're doing the full Santa Ana-plus-Laguna weekend, a rental car makes life much easier, though rideshare covers the festival and Santa Ana nightlife just fine. OCTA buses connect the major cities, but service is limited compared to a big transit city — plan around a car or rideshares.
Pro Tip
Fly into John Wayne (SNA), not LAX, if you can — it's right in Santa Ana, and you'll save yourself the notorious LA-to-OC freeway slog. It's one of the most underrated conveniences of doing Pride in Orange County.
OC Pride 2026 is on Saturday, October 10, 2026, from 11 AM to 10 PM, in the Downtown Santa Ana Historic District at 301 E 3rd Street. It's held during LGBTQ+ History Month and includes both a parade and an all-day festival.
OC Pride takes place in the streets of Downtown Santa Ana, Orange County's county seat, centered on the Historic District. The 2026 festival and parade return to downtown, where OC Pride has long-standing roots, produced by OC LGBT Pride.
Yes — general admission to OC Pride 2026 is free this year. The parade, the stages, and the festival grounds are open to the public at no charge, though there may be a paid VIP option and, as always, food, drinks, and vendor purchases cost extra.
Yes. OC Pride 2026 features a parade through the Downtown Santa Ana Historic District as part of the day, alongside multiple stages of entertainment and cultural zones. It's a festival-and-parade combined into one big Saturday.
Most of OC's gay bars are in and around Santa Ana — Queens Lounge and Noa Noa for Latin dance nights, The Fling and Mission Bar nearby — plus Tin Lizzie Saloon (country-western) in Costa Mesa and the Frat House in Garden Grove. Down the coast, The Seahorse flies a gay-friendly flag in Laguna Beach. Santa Ana is the nightlife anchor, especially on Pride weekend.
Very. Laguna Beach has been a gay destination for generations, home to the historic West Street Beach (the county's gay beach) and, for decades, the legendary Boom Boom Room. It remains a welcoming, artsy coastal town and the classic OC beach getaway to pair with a Pride weekend in Santa Ana.
Orange County is a car-first region, so a rental car is the easiest way to combine the Santa Ana festival with a Laguna Beach day and any other OC stops. Rideshare works well for the festival and Santa Ana nightlife if you'd rather not drive, and OCTA buses connect the major cities, though service is more limited than in a big transit city. Flying into John Wayne Airport (SNA) in Santa Ana keeps everything close and cuts out the LA freeway drive.
Stay in Santa Ana (near John Wayne Airport and the festival) if Pride is your focus — the DoubleTree, Courtyard, and Holiday Inn Express are all easy choices. Or make it a beach weekend down in Laguna Beach, where the Montage, Surf & Sand, Casa Loma, and La Casa del Camino put you on or near the sand. Many visitors do both: Santa Ana for Saturday, Laguna for a Sunday beach day.
