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Costa Rica Pride March Takes Over San José Today

San José returns to the streets this Sunday for the 2026 Marcha del Orgullo, one of the largest LGBTQ+ gatherings in Central America, with thousands of participants expected to fill the capital under the year’s theme, “El Orgullo Permanece” — “Pride Remains.” The march steps off at noon from the León Cortés statue on Paseo Colón and winds through downtown to the Plaza de la Democracia, where a free closing concert and public program will run into the evening.

The date is no accident. June 28 marks the anniversary of the 1969 Stonewall uprising in New York and is observed internationally as Pride Day, and Costa Rican organizers have framed this year’s edition around continuity and memory. Pride Costa Rica, which identified itself as the sole body responsible for convening, coordinating and communicating about the march, says the 2026 theme is meant to underline that the work of visibility and rights is not finished. “We feel pride because we exist,” the group wrote in one of its preparatory messages, “because there were people who walked before, when doing so meant risking their job, their family, their safety and, in some cases, their own life.”

For the second consecutive year, the organization has opted against naming an individual grand marshal, choosing instead what it calls a “collective marshalcy” that recognizes the whole community rather than a single figure. Josué Raven, a representative of the group, said the decision reflects the participatory spirit the organizers want for the event. The march typically draws social organizations, cultural collectives, companies, public institutions, religious groups that support sexual diversity, and large numbers of independent participants.

The day closes at the Plaza de la Democracia with a free concert featuring Costa Rican performers David Nick and Jecsinior Jara, along with several DJs, with television presenter Maureen Salguero among those hosting from the main stage. The closing program is open to the public and forms the centerpiece of the afternoon. As a prelude, organizers held the Feria del Orgullo on June 26 and 27 at the Centro Cultural de México in Los Yoses, gathering more than 30 community and ally-run businesses offering crafts, food and handmade goods, alongside raffles, bingo and free watercolor workshops.

Visitors and residents planning to be in central San José today should expect heavy pedestrian volume and rolling street closures along the route, which runs from the western end of Paseo Colón into the historic core near the National Museum. Drivers are advised to avoid the corridor during the early afternoon and to plan alternate routes through downtown. Raven said the organization has concentrated much of its preparation on logistics and safety, including contracting insurance and on-site medical services for participants.

Last year’s edition was not without friction. In 2025, the Commission for the Control and Classification of Public Performances, an office under the Ministry of Justice and Peace, reclassified the closing concert at the Plaza de la Democracia as an event restricted to those 18 and older, a decision that drew criticism and underscored the political dimension that still surrounds the gathering. Organizers have continued to stress that the march is, at its core, a demonstration as much as a celebration.

For the foreign residents, retirees and visitors who make up a large share of Costa Rica’s tourism and relocation appeal, the march is also a marker of the country’s reputation as one of the more rights-forward destinations in the region. Costa Rica legalized same-sex marriage in 2020, and the annual Pride march remains among the most visible expressions of that legal and cultural shift, regularly cited as one of the best-attended in Central America.

Those wishing to take part can join anywhere along the route, with the main concentration building near the León Cortés statue ahead of the noon start. Organizers have encouraged attendees to bring water, sun protection and comfortable footwear for an afternoon outdoors, and to follow the group’s official channels for any last-minute changes to the program or route.

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