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

Saturday, September 12, 2026
Midtown Green, Richmond, VA
2401 W Leigh St, Richmond, VA 23220, United StatesThe circuit parties, afterhours and official events happening across VA PrideFest in Richmond — dates, venues and tickets.
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Every September, the biggest LGBTQ+ party in the Commonwealth lands in Richmond. VA PrideFest — the festival run by Virginia Pride — draws tens of thousands to a single, sprawling day of music, drag, vendors, and community that has grown into one of the largest outdoor events the city throws all year. For 2026 it takes over Midtown Green on Saturday, September 12, and if you've never done a Pride in Virginia's capital, this is the one to build a weekend around.
This guide covers everything you need for the trip: the festival itself and how to do it, Richmond's genuinely good year-round gay bar scene from Carytown to downtown, where to eat and drink in the buzzing Scott's Addition district next door, how to get to town and around it, and where to stay. Richmond is a compact, walkable, surprisingly artsy river city — PrideFest is the perfect excuse to finally get to know it.
At its heart, VA PrideFest is a giant block party for the whole state's LGBTQ+ community. A pair of stages runs live music and performances all day, drag headliners hold court, and the festival field fills with more than 200 vendors, nonprofits, artists, and food and drink stands. It's a family-friendly daytime event that shifts into a looser, party-forward energy as the afternoon wears on — and because it's a single concentrated day rather than a week of scattered events, it has a real density and buzz to it.
The move to Midtown Green gave the festival a big, open field on West Leigh Street, a short hop from the Museum District and the breweries of Scott's Addition. As Virginia Pride's flagship, PrideFest is the anchor of a broader season the organization calls the "Endless Summer of Pride," but this is the day everyone circles on the calendar.
Pro Tip
General admission is free — just show up — but if you want shade, seating, and a private bar, grab the optional VIP experience online ahead of time. Either way, come early and hydrate: it's a long, open-field day into the evening on what can still be a warm September afternoon.
Here's what surprises first-timers: Richmond has a real, year-round LGBTQ+ nightlife scene, not just a Pride-weekend pop-up. The bars cluster downtown and out in Carytown, and PrideFest Saturday night is when they all go off. Virginia Pride's official kickoff and after-parties have historically landed at spots like Godfrey's and Barcode, so check their socials during the weekend for the current lineup — but any of these are a good night out.
Barcode is the polished downtown dance-and-cocktail hub; Godfrey's is the drag institution, home of a legendary weekend drag brunch that books up fast during Pride. Out in Carytown, Babe's of Carytown is one of the South's beloved lesbian bars with a big patio and a mixed, everybody's-welcome crowd, while Fallout covers the alternative, industrial, and fetish nights. Thirsty's is the neighborhood dive for a cheap, unfussy drink, and Richmond Triangle Players is the city's LGBTQ+ theater company if you want culture with your weekend.
Pro Tip
Godfrey's drag brunch is a Richmond rite of passage and one of the hottest reservations in town on Pride weekend. Book it the moment you lock your trip — walk-ups on PrideFest Sunday are a long shot.
Right next to Midtown Green sits Scott's Addition, Richmond's booming food-and-drink district — a former industrial zone now packed with breweries, a cidery, a meadery, food halls, and restaurants within easy reach of the festival. The Veil Brewing and Väsen, the Blue Bee and Buskey cideries, and Black Heath Meadery all sit within a few walkable blocks of each other. It's the natural place to land before or after PrideFest. Beyond it, the Fan District and Carytown round out the city's dining, and downtown's Shockoe Slip and Jackson Ward carry serious food history.
For a quick primer: Soul Taco in Shockoe Slip does soul-food-meets-taco plates that have become a local staple, Stir Crazy Cafe is a laid-back neighborhood coffee-and-brunch spot, and the Gold Lion Community Cafe is a welcoming, community-minded spot for a coffee and a breather between festival laps.
Richmond rewards the traveler who sticks around. Virginia's capital sits on the fall line of the James River, and one of the city's genuine wonders is the whitewater running right through downtown — the only urban Class III–IV rapids in the country, with the James River Park System threading trails, islands, and swimming spots through the heart of the city. Belle Isle, a former Civil War prison island reachable by footbridge, is a locals' favorite for a lazy afternoon on the rocks.
The city has also spent recent years remaking its own identity. Monument Avenue, once lined with Confederate statues, was transformed after 2020 into a very different kind of landmark, and the reckoning became part of Richmond's story as a modern Southern city. A few blocks matter to that history in a bigger way: Jackson Ward, long known as the "Harlem of the South," was one of the most important Black business and cultural districts in America — home to Maggie L. Walker, the first Black woman to charter a bank in the U.S. — and the Black History Museum & Cultural Center of Virginia tells that story today.
Just east of downtown, Shockoe Bottom carries a heavier history. Before the Civil War, Richmond was one of the largest centers of the domestic slave trade in the United States, and this low-lying district was its epicenter. Today the Richmond Slave Trail, the Reconciliation Statue, and the memorialized site of Lumpkin's Jail — the notorious "Devil's Half-Acre" — mark that past as part of the same civic reckoning that reshaped Monument Avenue. It's sobering, essential context for the city you're celebrating in.
For culture, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA) is one of the best art museums in the South and, remarkably, free to enter, with a sculpture garden and a marquee special-exhibition program. Nearby Maymont — a 100-acre Gilded Age estate turned public park, also free — layers a Japanese garden, an Italian garden, a mansion, and a small nature center onto a bluff above the river, and it's one of the loveliest ways to spend a Richmond morning. History buffs can wander Hollywood Cemetery, the dramatic 1847 hillside burial ground overlooking the James where two U.S. presidents rest. Carytown, a mile-long strip of independent shops, the historic Byrd Theatre, and vintage stores, is the walkable retail heart of the city. Add the world-class beer scene in Scott's Addition and you've got a full weekend before you ever set foot on the festival field.
Richmond International Airport (RIC) sits about 20–25 minutes east of downtown and is served by most major carriers, making a fly-in weekend easy. By car, Richmond is a straightforward drive at the crossroads of I-95 (the East Coast's main north–south artery) and I-64, roughly two hours south of Washington, D.C.
Richmond's core is compact, and the free-to-low-cost GRTC Pulse — a bus-rapid-transit line running along Broad Street — connects downtown, the Arts District, and the area near the festival grounds. Rideshare is plentiful and cheap by big-city standards. If you're staying downtown or in the Arts District, you can reach the nightlife on foot and grab a short ride to Midtown Green for the festival.
Pro Tip
Parking near Midtown Green fills up fast on festival day. Plan to rideshare, take the Pulse to a nearby stop, or arrive early — and don't drink and drive back to your hotel when a five-dollar rideshare is right there.
Richmond's hotels concentrate downtown and in the Arts District, both an easy ride from Midtown Green and walking distance to the bars. Book early — Pride weekend is one of the busier September dates on the city's calendar.
Pro Tip
Staying in the Arts District (around Broad Street) or downtown gives you the best of both worlds: walkable nightlife at night and a quick, cheap ride to Midtown Green by day. If you want to skip the car entirely, a downtown base plus the Pulse and rideshare covers the whole weekend.
Richmond's neighborhoods — the Fan, Church Hill, and Jackson Ward among them — are full of historic row houses and apartments that rent by the night, often for less than a downtown hotel and with more space if you're traveling as a group. Book early for the September Pride window.
VA PrideFest 2026 is on Saturday, September 12, 2026, at Midtown Green (formerly the Bon Secours Training Center) at 2401 W. Leigh Street in Richmond. It runs as a full afternoon-into-evening festival; recent years have run roughly noon to 8 PM, so plan for a long day out.
The 2026 festival is at Midtown Green in Richmond, a large open field on West Leigh Street a short distance from the Museum District and the breweries of Scott's Addition. It's produced by Virginia Pride, a program of Diversity Richmond.
General admission to VA PrideFest is free and open to the public — in recent years the festival has run free, with more than 200 vendors and entertainment across two stages. There's an optional paid VIP experience (shade, seating, and a private bar) worth grabbing in advance, and the after-parties around town may carry their own covers, but you don't need a ticket to get onto the festival grounds.
No — VA PrideFest is a festival, not a parade. There's no march or parade route to line up along; instead, the whole celebration happens on the festival grounds at Midtown Green, with stages, vendors, and community booths. Plan your day around the field and the after-parties rather than a parade.
Richmond has a solid year-round scene. Barcode is the downtown dance-and-cocktail hub, Godfrey's is the drag institution (famous weekend drag brunch), and out in Carytown, Babe's of Carytown is a beloved lesbian bar with a big patio. Fallout runs the alternative and fetish nights, Thirsty's is the go-to dive, and Richmond Triangle Players is the city's LGBTQ+ theater. On PrideFest weekend, check Virginia Pride's socials for the official kickoff and after-party venues.
Stay downtown or in the Arts District to be close to both the nightlife and a quick ride to Midtown Green. The Quirk Hotel is the artsy boutique pick, The Jefferson Hotel the grand splurge, Graduate Richmond the playful central option, and Hilton Richmond Downtown the reliable full-service choice. Book early — Pride weekend fills September dates fast.
Midtown Green is at 2401 W. Leigh Street, a short distance northwest of downtown near the Museum District and Scott's Addition. The easiest approach on festival day is rideshare or the GRTC Pulse bus-rapid-transit line (which runs along Broad Street to a nearby stop), since on-site and street parking fill up quickly. If you drive, arrive early and be ready to walk a few blocks. From downtown or the Arts District it's only a few minutes by car.
Yes. Beyond hosting the Commonwealth's largest Pride, Richmond has a real, established LGBTQ+ community with year-round bars, an LGBTQ+ theater company, and Diversity Richmond as a longstanding community anchor. It's a compact, artsy, river-city weekend with a strong food and beer scene and plenty to do — an easy and welcoming trip for a Pride visit or any time of year.
