Chicago’s annual Pride Parade will kick off at 11 a.m. Sunday, starting in the Northalsted neighborhood and heading south.

Pride will begin at North Halsted and West Grace Streets, heading down Halsted to Belmont. It will move east on Belmont to Broadway, then south on Broadway, ending at the corner of North Sheridan Road and West Diversey Parkway. The parade is expected to last about three hours, and the route is about two miles long.

Chicago’s first Pride was in 1970, on the first anniversary of the Stonewall riots in New York City. The city’s annual parade is the largest in the Midwest.

Heat and humidity reminiscent of last weekend are forecast throughout the day. By the end of the parade, temperatures may reach 89 degrees or more and the heat index will push 87 degrees, according to the National Weather Service. There’s also a chance of rain and thunderstorms Sunday afternoon.

The Grand Marshals of the 2025 parade are Cathy Creticos and Maya Green, two infectious disease doctors honored for their contributions to LGBTQ health in Chicago. This year also honors the parade’s first Out Front community group, TaskForce Prevention & Community Services.

“This is the first year we had the community actually vote to lift up the people that they wanted to represent them at the parade,” said Terra Campbell, Pride Chicago’s community engagement director. “Corporations normally have the biggest footprint of visibility — it won’t be that way in Chicago anymore.”

Pride Month wraps up as the federal government has moved to restrict services and rights for many in the LGBTQ community. Earlier in June, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender affirming care for minors and allowed parents to opt their children out of curriculum involving LGBTQ themes. The Trump administration also plans to end the 988 suicide hotline’s specialized services for LGBTQ youth in mid-July.

Amid moves to curtail queer health and education, parade volunteer Moses Lee said it’s important to show up for the entire LGBTQ community.

“If there’s anything about the community, it’s that we’ve gone through really tough times, and we can do it again,” Lee said.

While many Pride celebrations around the country have seen a decline in corporate sponsorship and participation, Pride Chicago has not seen a significant change in partners and volunteers.

“Unlike many organizations in cities of comparable size, PRIDEChicago has only offered sponsorship opportunities for the past three years and does not require multi-year commitments,” Pride Chicago board chair Steve Long wrote in an email. “As such, fluctuations in participation are natural and should not be viewed as indicative of broader trends.”

Paraders set up

This is the first year Metra is participating in the parade. Engineer Aaron Kruse, who designed the float, said he was going for a “Lisa Frank” aesthetic — trying to emulate the “’90s icon,” he said.

“I just wanted to incorporate a little bit of the elements of the parade,” Kruse said. “Usually, the grand marshals (of) the parades have backpacks, balloons. I wanted to incorporate that with pool noodles — make it a little more durable.”

This is Kruse’s fifth parade, though in the past he’s watched from the sidewalks. He said he’s often attended with his girlfriend and her sister, who is gay.

Metra is participating in this year’s parade to show support for its customers, said marketing director Elaine Teter.

“Everyone is welcome to ride Metra, and we need to be in the community for people to know that we definitely support everyone,” Teter said.

Northwestern University Professor Megan Bang and her child, Miigis Curley, helped put together a float for the Chicago area’s queer Native American community. Bang is Ojibwe and Curley is Ojibwe and Navajo.

They said they’re attending to both educate the broader community about queer identities in Indigenous cultures and increase support for queer youth within Native communities.

The Native coalition’s float features the word “LOVE” in large rainbow letters, as well as a sign that reads “THE-ORIGINAL-QUEER,” referring to the normalcy of queer Native identities before European contact with the Americas, Bang said.

By marching in the parade with other Indigenous people from the Chicago area, Bang and Curley hope to celebrate queer Native people, who they say have faced discrimination within the wider LGBTQ+ community as well.

“I feel like one of the things about this float is yes, to remind other queer people, but also to celebrate our queer youth, our two-spirit youth, and holding celebration for ourselves by being here,” Curley said.

Originally Published: June 29, 2025 at 9:15 AM CDT