Coney Island’s Mermaid Parade Turns Surf Avenue Into a One of a Kind Sea of Spectacle

Fire performer @kingtitanyc breathes fire outside Nathan’s Famous during the 44th Annual Mermaid Parade in Coney Island, Brooklyn.

The 44th Annual Mermaid Parade turned Coney Island into a moving street theater of mermaids, sea creatures, floats, fire, bubbles, music, and handmade spectacle on Saturday, June 20, 2026.

Produced by Coney Island USA, the parade once again filled Surf Avenue with the mix of pageantry, humor, local pride, and public art that has made it one of New York City’s defining summer events. From Nathan’s Famous to the Cyclone, the route became a stage for costumed performers, families, artists, titleholders, musicians, dancers, dogs, and spectators who came dressed for the start of summer.

Costumed participants carry the official Mermaid Parade banner during the 44th Annual Mermaid Parade in Coney Island, Brooklyn.
Costumed participants carry the official Mermaid Parade banner during the 44th Annual Mermaid Parade in Coney Island, Brooklyn. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

Founded in 1983, the Mermaid Parade celebrates Coney Island’s long tradition of invention and spectacle while opening the summer season for the amusement district. Coney Island USA describes it as the nation’s largest art parade, and the 2026 edition carried that spirit through every block: part costume contest, part public performance, part neighborhood ritual, and part reminder that Coney Island still knows how to make the street feel unpredictable.

The strongest moments came from the handmade details. Paradegoers built entire identities out of shells, pearls, sequins, coral, body paint, parasols, tridents, fish heads, jellyfish forms, axolotl colors, sculptural headpieces, and ocean-themed props. Some costumes leaned polished and theatrical, while others carried the kind of funny, homemade charm that belongs to Coney Island. Together, they gave the parade its texture.

@summersparkles__ in a white sculptural sea-creature costume at the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
@summersparkles__ in a white sculptural sea-creature costume. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
A large group of costumed participants pose during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
A large group portrait showed the parade’s mix of wigs, sequins, feathers, props, and theatrical makeup. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

Outside Nathan’s Famous, @kingtitanyc brought one of the day’s most dramatic scenes, breathing fire as a large orange flame cut across the frame with the landmark hot dog signs behind him. Nearby, a giant soap bubble performer created a wide iridescent bubble that stretched over the parade route, catching the light and the crowd’s attention. Roller skaters, dancers, musicians, and float performers kept the movement going between the more formal parade groups.

@kingtitanyc breathes fire outside Nathan’s Famous during the 44th Annual Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
@kingtitanyc breathes fire outside Nathan’s Famous. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
A crowned performer creates a giant iridescent soap bubble during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
A giant soap bubble stretched across the parade route. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

That local identity came through in the humor as much as the landmarks. There were Brooklyn Cyclones references, Knicks basketball hoop costumes, Heinz ketchup and mustard looks, an Old Bay crab costume by @lilmisslixx, and a handmade “Straight outta CONEY ISLAND” sign. The City Reliquary Museum’s Miss Subways banner added another New York layer, connecting the parade’s sea creatures and performers to the city’s history of transit, pageants, and public characters.

Brooklyn Cyclones mascot float during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
Brooklyn Cyclones references brought local sports into the parade route. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
A Knicks basketball hoop costume appears during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
A Knicks basketball hoop costume added another New York reference. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
@lilmisslixx wears an Old Bay crab costume during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
@lilmisslixx wore an Old Bay crab costume with boardwalk humor. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
@yacetie poses in a mermaid costume outside Nathan’s Famous during the Mermaid Parade.
@yacetie outside Nathan’s Famous. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

The parade’s costume culture also had room for sharper artistic statements. Machine Dazzle appeared in a reflective silver sculptural coral costume, bringing the kind of high-concept costume design that fits naturally inside the Mermaid Parade’s anything-goes format. @hardybrooklyn.nyc carried an environmental message through body paint reading, “NO MORE EXTINCTION OR WE’RE NEXT,” turning a sea-creature look into a warning about the future of the natural world.

Machine Dazzle in a reflective silver coral costume during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
Machine Dazzle in a reflective silver coral costume. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
@hardybrooklyn.nyc wears body paint reading NO MORE EXTINCTION OR WE’RE NEXT during the Mermaid Parade.
@hardybrooklyn.nyc carried an environmental message through body paint. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

Portraits along the route showed the range of the day. @vitanibeauty wore an elaborate pink fantasy costume with a jeweled silver headdress, butterfly details, pearl chains, and flowing cape panels. @summersparkles__ stood out in a white sculptural sea-creature costume. @caramiahorrorlesque brought a horror-theater edge with monochrome face paint, a red contact lens, black lipstick, and sea-themed earrings. @fionaodellbradley leaned into a red-and-white boardwalk pinup style, while @crackheadbarneyandfriends__ brought hot-pink mermaid energy with bold face paint, mirrored sunglasses, and a wild blonde wig.

@vitanibeauty in an elaborate pink fantasy costume at the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
@vitanibeauty in an elaborate pink fantasy costume. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
@caramiahorrorlesque poses with monochrome horror-theater face paint at the Mermaid Parade.
@caramiahorrorlesque brought a horror-theater edge to the parade. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
@fionaodellbradley in a red-and-white striped pinup boardwalk costume at the Mermaid Parade.
@fionaodellbradley in a red-and-white boardwalk pinup look. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
@crackheadbarneyandfriends__ in a hot-pink mermaid-style costume at the Mermaid Parade.
@crackheadbarneyandfriends__ brought hot-pink mermaid energy. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

The parade also worked because it never belonged to only one type of participant. Families walked beside performers. Children wore mermaid tails and crowns. A small dog appeared along the route in costume. Miss Brooklyn 2026, Giovanna Ward, appeared in a blue sequined dress, sash, and crown. The Findyhoppers brought music and group movement, while other groups carried banners, instruments, floats, props, and signs.

@hloobs family costume group at the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
Families and groups helped make the parade feel open and communal. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
A colorful paradegoer holds a small dog in a yellow hood during the Mermaid Parade.
A small dog joined the costume culture along the parade route. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
Miss Brooklyn 2026 Giovanna Ward at the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
Miss Brooklyn 2026 Giovanna Ward appeared in a blue sequined dress, sash, and crown. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
The Findyhoppers pose with instruments and a banner during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
The Findyhoppers brought music, instruments, and group movement. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

Some of the best frames were not the loudest. A large costume group spread across the street showed the collective energy of the parade: wigs, sequins, feathers, inflatable props, pink costumes, theatrical makeup, and people performing for the camera as much as for the crowd. A gold deep-sea diver walking with a handmade ocean float, surrounded by plush sharks, dolphins, crabs, shells, and mermaids, captured the parade’s love of built objects. The official Mermaid Parade banner, held by costumed participants, gave the day its formal marker before the route dissolved again into color and motion.

A gold deep-sea diver walks with a handmade ocean-themed float during the Mermaid Parade.
A gold deep-sea diver walked with a handmade ocean-themed float. Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.
A group honors the Incredible 101 Year Old Mermaid during the Mermaid Parade in Coney Island.
An intergenerational group honored “the Incredible 101 Year Old Mermaid.” Photo by Richard Scalzo / A Fixed Moment.

By the time the parade moved through Coney Island, the line between participant and spectator felt loose. People on the sidewalks dressed for the day. Cameras turned in every direction. The boardwalk food references, sports jokes, pageant crowns, sea creatures, and handmade props all pointed back to the same idea: the Mermaid Parade is strongest when it feels like everyone has permission to become part of the scene.

From Nathan’s Famous to the Cyclone, from Miss Subways to a giant soap bubble floating down the route, the 2026 Mermaid Parade showed Coney Island at its most theatrical. Its strength was not only in one crowned figure, one float, or one performance, but in the thousands of small acts of invention that turned Surf Avenue into a shared stage.

More Photos From the 44th Annual Mermaid Parade

Click any image to enlarge. Use the arrows to move through the gallery.

See the Full Mermaid Parade Gallery

This is only a preview. A Fixed Moment photographed many more participants at the 44th Annual Mermaid Parade in Coney Island, including extra portraits, alternate images and high-resolution photos from the parade.

Patreon is free to join, with more event galleries and photo coverage posted there.

View More Photos on Patreon

“`