Quick Facts: America 250 Flyover
- Date: 4 July 2026
- Location: National Mall, Washington, D.C.
- Thunderbirds: First-ever demonstration over D.C. monuments
- Bombers: B-52H, B-1B Lancer, B-2 Spirit — all three types together
- Fighters: F-22 Raptor, F-35B Lightning II
- Navy: Blue Angels (F/A-18E/F Super Hornet)
- Fireworks: 850,000 shells
Three Bombers, Two Demo Teams, One Sky
The centrepiece of the aerial programme is a formation that has never been assembled over a civilian audience: all three types of American strategic bomber flying together. The B-52 — in continuous service since 1955, older than most of the pilots who fly it — will share the sky with the swing-wing B-1B and the stealth B-2 Spirit. It is a visual timeline of seven decades of American air power, compressed into a single formation pass over the Washington Monument. The Thunderbirds and Blue Angels will perform sequentially, with the Thunderbirds' F-16C Fighting Falcons executing their signature diamond formation and the Blue Angels following in their Super Hornets. Combined with F-22 and F-35B flypasts, the total represents roughly $6 billion in airborne hardware.
A First for the Thunderbirds
The Thunderbirds have performed at air shows across the world since 1953, but the D.C. restricted flight zone has always kept them away from the capital's monuments. July 4th, 2026 represents a rare exception — a temporary flight restriction waiver granted specifically for the semiquincentennial celebration.850,000 Reasons to Look Up
The aerial display is paired with what organisers say will be the largest Fourth of July fireworks show in American history — 850,000 individual shells launched from ten sites, including eight barges on the Potomac and the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. The show is designed to synchronise with the final flyover passes. For the pilots, the day is straightforward: fly the profiles they have trained thousands of hours to execute, in front of the largest audience most of them will ever see. For the spectators, it is something rarer — a chance to see the full spectrum of American military aviation, from a 71-year-old bomber to the latest stealth fighter, sharing the same patch of sky above the same monuments where the country began.Sources: U.S. Air Force, Department of Defense, USAF Thunderbirds, USN Blue Angels, Associated Press
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