Summary

  • We are ending our live coverage on this page - you can read our wrap of the day's celebrations here

  • The United States is marking its 250th birthday with nationwide events, including a series of concerts and flypasts, as well as fireworks displays

  • President Donald Trump gave a heavily historical speech, which was delayed due to bad weather, focusing on historical flags and inviting war heroes to the stage

  • The National Mall stage and Great American State Fair reopened in Washington after being evacuated

  • Temperatures over 100F (38C), as well as rain and the threat of thunderstorms, have disrupted some celebrations

  • US citizens have been telling the BBC their thoughts about the anniversary of Independence Day

  1. Trump says speech might be shorterpublished at 02:13 BST

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    White House reporter

    President Trump seems confident that the show will go on.

    In a phone call with Fox News just moments ago, Trump reportedly said that while his speech may be a "little bit shorter", he plans to do it, no matter what.

    "If they can storm the beaches on D-Day, I can deliver a speech," the network reported he said.

    A White House official tells the BBC that remarks are expected at 23:00 local time (04:00 BST), followed by fireworks, at the venue.

  2. Trump's speech is delayed, White House representative tells Fox Newspublished at 02:03 BST

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    White House reporter

    Those of us physically at the White House have not heard official anything from staffers here about whether President Trump's speech is delayed, and our view of what is happening in the surrounding area is very limited.

    But just a short while ago, the White House's chief of protocol, Monica Crowley, called Fox News to deliver an update.

    According to Crowley, the event is neither postponed nor cancelled as things stand.

    "It is delayed as of right now," she said, adding that organisers and the White House are receiving updates every 15 minutes.

    She confirmed, however, that those who were screened at the National Mall "security bubble" who left the area will have to be re-screened as they enter. It is unclear how long that would take.

    We have yet to hear from President Trump this evening on-camera or on Truth Social.

  3. No more flyoverspublished at 01:47 BST

    Screens at the Washington mall event have just advised that remaining flyovers for the night have been cancelled.

    F22 Raptor fighter jets escort the new version of Air Force One over the National Mall in Washington DC on July 4 before thunderstorms threatened.Image source, Aaron Schwartz/POOL/EPA/Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    F22 Raptor fighter jets escort the new version of Air Force One over the National Mall in Washington DC on July 4 before thunderstorms threatened.

  4. Police ride through fairgrounds clearing out public as storm loomspublished at 01:37 BST

    Police rode motorcycles and evacuated visitors to nearby shelters at the fair at the mall area in Washington.US President Donald Trump was scheduled to speak later this evening but that may be delayed. The White House has not made an official announcement yet.

    A large screen advised that the weather would mean the delay of a series of musical acts as well.

    Police ride motorcycles, while people seek shelter during the Great American State Fair on the National Mall, marking the 250th anniversary of U.S. Independence, as inclement weather moves across the area, in Washington,Image source, REUTERS/Cheney Orr
    A view of the Great American State Fair after an evacuation was ordered because of approaching thunderstorms on the National Mall in WashingtonImage source, Photo by GRAEME SLOAN/EPA/Shutterstock
  5. Public sent to Thomas Jefferson Memorial and national museums as shelters from stormpublished at 01:26 BST

    As we reported earlier, officials have been urging attendees at the Washington Fourth of July celebrations to take cover from the storm in one of the museums that line the Mall, such as the Museum of Natural History, Museum of American History, or Museum of African American History and Culture.

    Freedom 250 has expanded the list of available shelters to include the Thomas Jefferson Memorial, the Ronald Reagan Building, and the office buildings for the departments of Commerce, Education, and Agriculture.

    "The safety of our guests, performers, and staff is our top priority," their statement read, urging all guests to evacuate event grounds and seek temporary shelter nearby.

    Law enforcement officers and members of the US Secret Service have been seen helping people leave the event space.

    Law enforcement officers help attendees evacuate the area as a storm approaches Washington DC.Image source, Reuters
  6. 'Once in a lifetime,' Americans descend on the capital from all over the USpublished at 01:16 BST

    Peter Bowes
    North America correspondent, in Washington

    Tammy Wapshott smiling, wears a hat with sunglasses, a pair of navy headphones slung around her neck.
    Image caption,

    Tammy Wapshott is celebrating America's birthday along with her own

    From Washington state on the west coast to Washington DC, many have travelled far and wide to gather at the National Mall for the 250 celebrations in the capital.

    "None of us will ever see this celebration again," says Tammy Wapshott from South Carolina – busy celebrating not just America's birthday, but her own too.

    "250 years, isn't that amazing?" she says, in reference to the age of her country, not herself. Having planned the visit since November last year, she tells the BBC she wanted to celebrate "the best country in the world" where all are "free to do what we wanna do".

    "We're all just here to celebrate our country," says Chris Cornell from Maryland, who rejects the idea that the independence anniversary has turned political.

    Shirtless man with orange-tinted wide sunglasses speaks into a microphone.
    Image caption,

    Scott Kopaczwski from Tampa, Florida, is accustomed to the heat

    Many people are struggling with the temperature. "Hotter than heck," is how Kip Elliot from Nashville, Tennessee, is finding it.

    David Richardson has jetted in from Seattle and is using all the tools at his disposal to stay cool – water, fans, spray mist, an umbrella. And ice cream, to the delight of his young son, Elijah.

    Those who have arrived from warmer climates, like Scott Kopaczwski from Tampa, Florida, say the heat "reminds" them of home.

    South Carolina's Tammy, also acclimatised to warmer weather, admits she's "struggling" and "'burnin' up".

  7. No word yet from a still very quiet White Housepublished at 00:58 BST 5 July

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    White House reporter

    Only a handful of reporters and staff are currently milling about the press area in the White House.

    A short time ago, many gathered outside to watch a flyover of Air Force One and various US combat aircraft, including the B-2 bombers made famous by last year's strikes on Iran.

    We have not yet received any update on President Trump's movements this evening.

    He was scheduled to speak in under two hours, but it's very possible - perhaps likely - that is delayed. Those who have left the area where he was expected to speech will almost certainly need to go through security checkpoints again. Given the crowd size, that may be a time-consuming process.

    We will give you more updates as we receive them.

  8. Evacuations from the National Mall begin amid thunderstorm warningspublished at 00:44 BST 5 July

    Rich Preston
    BBC News

    A screen displays a severe weather warning message, during the Great American State Fair on the National Mall, marking the 250th anniversary of US IndependenceImage source, Reuters

    Just as we began setting up cameras to film the Salute to America celebrations, warnings came through about a potentially devastating thunderstorm sweeping through DC.

    We are being told to pack up and get off the press risers and seek shelter.

    Homeland Security officials are urging attendees to take cover in one of the museums that line the Mall, like Museum of Natural History, Museum of American History, or Museum of African American History and Culture.

    We do not know yet how the weather will impact the rest of the day's itinerary.

  9. Trump's new take on 250 years of American expansionismpublished at 00:26 BST 5 July

    Anthony Zurcher
    North America correspondent

    Map of US in 1828Image source, Getty Images

    In the 250 years since the US declared its independence from Great Britain, the nation has grown from a sparsely populated collection of settlements scattered along the Atlantic coast into a global power spread over the breadth of a continent and beyond.

    Starting from the original 13 colonies that covered 430,000 sq miles (1.1 million sq km), its geographic footprint has increased eightfold, to approximately 3.7 million sq miles.

    The US population has undergone a similarly dramatic expansion. In 1790, the year of the first US Census, there were approximately four million Americans, including slaves. By 2025, this number had grown to 343 million – an 8,475% increase.

    Even though the US today may be all but unrecognisable to the nation's founders 250 years ago, the cultural and political influences in the country would likely be familiar.

    In hindsight, one can trace many of President Donald Trump's key political promises - limiting immigration, and expanding US power and territory - to the country's earliest distinctions and divisions.

    Read my full analysis here.

  10. No sign of Patriot Front near Washington celebration sitepublished at 00:05 BST 5 July

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    White House reporter

    Earlier today, we reported that members of the Patriot Front white supremacist group were in Washington, where they were seen at various points throughout the city.

    They now appear to have left the immediate area around the celebrations, with Reuters reporting that they boarded Washington's subway system and left for New Carrolton, a suburb of the city in nearby Prince George's County, Maryland.

    It is unclear where they have gone or whether they have dispersed once arriving there.

    Reuters reported that about 400 members of the group were in the city, with hundreds visible at various points.

    Videos posted to social media and the group's own Telegram channel showed the masked, uniformed members marching to drummers near the Capitol and Union Station, the city's main passenger rail hub.

    The group was founded in 2017 following violence at the "Unite the Right" rally in Virginia, breaking off from another group.

    A commuter sits as members of the group Patriot Front ride the metroImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Members of Patriot Front were seen riding the metro in Washington

  11. Temporary closure at DC metro station causes frustrationpublished at 23:45 BST 4 July

    Jonathan Csapo
    BBC Producer, reporting from Washington

    Dozen people line the platforms of a metro station

    With patience wearing already thin from the 40C (104F) temperatures outside, the announcement that a metro station on the National Mall was temporarily closed brought groans and shouts of anger from patrons trapped inside.

    Throngs of would-be spectators lined both sides of the subway platform and watched trains pass by - seemingly trapped and with the possibility of missing tonight’s festivities hanging in the air.

    Station managers refused to let anyone exit because the National Mall was “full”. After a half hour the station reopened - and passengers were greeted by lines wrapping around blocks for the next part of their 4th of July adventure - the Secret Service checkpoints.

  12. A recap: Trump delivers speech at Mount Rushmore to mark Independence Daypublished at 23:35 BST 4 July

    Donald Trump delivers a speech on a stage in front of Mt Rushmore. The four faces of the sculpture are lit up against the darkImage source, Reuters

    US President Donald Trump gave a patriotic speech at an iconic monument to celebrate the nation's 250th anniversary.

    Trump visited Mount Rushmore National Memorial - the massive sculpture where former Presidents George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln have been carved directly into a rocky hillside - on Friday to pay tribute to the country's birthday.

    During his speech Trump described how the former presidents "could only be made in the USA" and said that they had gathered at the mountain to express gratitude to the leaders who made the US the "most successful nation ever".

    Trump has previously made comments about how his face should also be carved into the stone on Mount Rushmore in the Black Hills in South Dakota, and has even shared AI generated images of his head attached to the sculpture.

    Fireworks light up the dark sky behind the four faces of the former presidents on Mount RushmoreImage source, Reuters
    US President Donald Trump speaks between two big screens in front of Mount Rushmore. The stone faces of the monument are lit up in the darkImage source, Reuters
  13. Hot dog eating competition veterans win again in New Yorkpublished at 22:57 BST 4 July

    Joey Chestnut participates in the 2026 Nathan's Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest, at Coney Island, Brooklyn in New York City, U.S., July 4, 2026.Image source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Joey Chestnut

    In backyards across the US, hot dogs are being grilled as part of Independence Day tradition.

    In New York's Coney Island, however, it's a serious business - the annual hot dog eating contest has taken place and there are two very familiar winners.

    Joey Chestnut won the men's category - his 18th title in the contest, which was first held in 1972. This year, Chestnut downed 66 hot dogs in 10 minutes, according to CBS, the BBC's US partner - beating second place winner, Patrick Bertoletti, who ate 51.

    In the women's competition, Miki Sudo finished 38 and three-quarters of a hot dog to claim her 12th title. Michelle Lesco came in second place with 22 hot dogs.

    Miki Sudo from Tampa, Florida, participates in the 2026 Nathan's Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest, at Coney Island, Brooklyn in New York CityImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Miki Sudo

  14. Police cars and garbage bins block streets near quiet White Housepublished at 22:38 BST 4 July

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    White House reporter

    US Navy paratrooper carrying a US flag lands on the Ellipse just outside the White House (visible in the background surrounded by trees)Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    A member of the US Navy parachute team "Leap Frogs" landed with a giant US flag on The Ellipse near the White House earlier

    I've just arrived at the White House - which is surprisingly empty despite the wall-to-wall coverage of the July 4 celebrations on American media.

    There are only a handful of reporters here, primarily from the outlets that staff the White House permanently or from the outlets that are in the daily press pool - which today includes the BBC.

    Security was not abnormal for a large-scale event. The area on the north side of the White House is blocked off to pedestrians, extra black fencing has gone up, and garbage trucks and police cars are blocking nearby streets.

    The set-up is similar to what we see when a high-profile visitor - such as Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky or Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu - come to visit, or when large protests are planned in the city.

    The streets on this side of the White House are largely empty, except for handfuls of tourists stopping to watch the flyovers, including a US Navy F/A-18 just moments ago.

    Side shot of the White House taken from the garden
  15. Big cluster of thunderstorms threaten eastern US with major disruptionpublished at 22:19 BST 4 July

    Ben Rich
    Lead Weather Presenter

    All day, we’ve been reporting on the hazardous heat and humidity that’s affecting 4 July celebrations across the east of the USA, but now an additional hazard is approaching – the threat of thunderstorms.

    Over the last couple of hours, radar imagery has shown a big cluster of thunderstorms developing just west of Washington DC – and we’re expecting these to drift across the city imminently.

    These could contain frequent lightning, some large hail, and be accompanied by some very squally winds.

    Storms are also erupting across some other eastern parts of the country including Pennsylvania – and there’s a chance these could threaten the World Cup match between Paraguay and France, which is currently under way.

    Sunday will bring more widespread thunderstorms and heavy downpours in the eastern USA, with the risk of flash flooding and weekend travel headaches.

  16. Fifty years on - how the 200th anniversary was celebratedpublished at 22:03 BST 4 July

    Crowd Gathered for the United States Bicentennial Celebration in front of the National Archives buildingImage source, Corbis via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Huge crowds gathered outside the National Archives building in Washington DC

    The last major anniversary the US celebrated was back in 1976 - and its 200th birthday.

    President Gerald Ford led celebrations that time around. The occasion came on the back of a political crisis following the Watergate scandal that forced President Richard Nixon to resign.

    To mark the country's 200th birthday, Ford delivered a speech in Philadelphia - considered the "birthplace of America" - and attended a series of activities leading up to 4 July, 1976.

    The White House hosted special visitors from across the pond too - the late Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip.

    Queen Elizabeth II (L) in a yellow dress and blue sash across her chest, the Queen Alexandra Kokoshnik Tiara on her head, dances with US President Gerard Ford (R) in a black tuxedo at the White HouseImage source, Universal Images Group via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    The late Queen Elizabeth II dancing with then-US President Gerald Ford at the White House

    Wide shot of the presentation ceremony of the Magna Carta from members of the House of Lords to Congress members in the Capitol Building RotundaImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    The Magna Carta was loaned to the US to mark the bicentennial, with members of the House of Lords presenting the document to Congress in March 1976

    The Cleveland Arcade decorated in US flags and bunting to celebrate the bicentennial of the US in 1976Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Balconies and ceilings at the ornate Cleveland Arcade - in downtown Cleveland, Ohio - were draped in the colours red, white and blue

  17. Living former presidents share birthday messages for USpublished at 21:46 BST 4 July

    From left to right - Former U.S. presidents Joe Biden, Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton pose ahead of the dedication ceremony for the opening of the Barack Obama Presidential Center.Image source, Poll/Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Living former presidents at the opening of the Obama Presidential Center last month

    All four living former US presidents have shared messages as the nation marks its 250th anniversary.

    President Joe Biden, the immediate past president, recalls the premise of the Declaration of Independence that all people are created equal.

    "We chose that path 250 years ago but that’s where the work began, not where it ended," he says before warning that the nation's promise of equality for all was still a work in progress.

    "We still haven't fully lived up to those words in the Declaration. But we've never walked away from them, and this July 4, I hope all of us can commit to one thing: that we never will."

    The country's first Black president, Barack Obama, has reshared excerpts of a recent speech he made at the opening of his presidential museum last month in which he talks about the nation's founding and shared values.

    "There's more to do to fulfil the nation's founding ideals," he says, adding that "every generation must take up the unfinished work of the last and carry it further - protecting what’s right, fixing what’s wrong, and making our union a little more perfect."

    The 43rd president George W. Bush says that "the next 250 years require Americans to be citizens, not spectators". Americans need to "take an active interest in the health and welfare of our country and the communities in which they live", he adds.

    His predecessor Bill Clinton used his congratulatory anniversary message to also comment on the state of US politics today.

    "Today, we celebrate this milestone amid another period of deep division, renewed questions about America's future and role in the world, and serious threats to our own institutions and to our democracy itself," the 42nd president said.

  18. Watch: Red Arrows soar over the New York skylinepublished at 21:26 BST 4 July

    Media caption,

    The Red Arrows perform a flypast in New York to mark the USA's 250th anniversary

    The Red Arrows have joined a flypast over New York to mark 250 years of American independence.

    The RAF aerobatic team trailed red, white and blue smoke - arranged to depict the US flag - above the Hudson River, with Manhattan's skyscrapers providing a spectacular backdrop.

    Wing Cdr Jon Bond, who led the team's formation, says: "Flying over New York, surrounded by so many iconic landmarks and famous locations on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of American independence, is a huge honour."

    He adds the invitation underlines the "enduring relationship" between the UK and US.

    "It has been fantastic to bring the Red Arrows' signature red, white and blue colours to this special occasion and celebrate the 4th of July with the American people and all those watching."

    The Red Arrows - based at RAF Waddington in Lincolnshire - are carrying out a month-long tour of the United States to mark America 250.

    Saturday's flypast involved more than 150 other aircraft from around the world.

    You can read more about the flyover in our story here.

  19. New Sweden: The US's long-lost 'secret' colonypublished at 21:08 BST 4 July

    Eliot Stein
    BBC Travel

    An old 'New Sweden' postage stamp in blue and yellow colours showing a European man speaking to two native Ameircans, dated 1638Image source, Serenity Strull / Getty Images

    Nicknamed "The Birthplace of America", Philadelphia is where the Declaration of Independence was signed 250 years ago today.

    However, almost no one knows that the site of this historic moment was once Swedish.

    This is the story of the US's long-lost colony, a Swedish settlement that once spread from Maryland to New Jersey and helped shape the future of the country to come.

    "It started as sort of secret colony," says Deborah-Jean Hoffman of the New Sweden Centre.

    "The Swedes weren't flag-planting like the French or the Spanish. The idea was to create an under-the-radar colony where the Dutch wouldn't see them," she adds.

  20. US welcomes new citizens on landmark anniversarypublished at 20:49 BST 4 July

    New US citizens listen to the Star-Spangled Banner during a naturalization ceremony at George Washington's Mount Vernon in Mount Vernon.Image source, Bloomberg via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    New citizens pay respect to the national anthem

    For some, today will be remembered not just as a milestone anniversary but as the day they officially became citizens of the United States.

    A naturalisation ceremony at the Mount Vernon estate welcomed new members into the fold as they took the oath of allegiance; promising to, among other things, obey and defend the US constitution against foreign and domestic enemies and to bear arms for the nation if required by law.

    The location for the ceremony is especially notable. The Mount Vernon estate was the private residence and slave plantation of first US President George Washington and is located just outside the US capital, which is named in his honour.

    New US citizens raise their right hands to take the Naturalization Oath of Allegiance during a naturalization ceremony at George Washington's Mount Vernon in Mount Vernon, VirginiaImage source, Bloomberg via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    New citizens take the oath of allegiance at a naturalisation ceremony

    New US citizens raise their right hands to take the Naturalization Oath of Allegiance during a naturalization ceremony at George Washington's Mount Vernon in Mount VernonImage source, Bloomberg via Getty Images
    A George Washington reenactor speaks to new US citizens during a naturalization ceremony at George Washington's Mount Vernon in Mount Vernon, Virginia, USImage source, Bloomberg via Getty Images
    Image caption,

    A George Washington reenactor speaks to new US citizens