The 250th anniversary of American independence is soon with us and Spain has been partaking in celebrations in several ways across the country.
There will be (and have already been) lots of events and attention in Spain, something especially notable in context of Spanish PM Pedro Sánchez's strained relationship with President Donald Trump.
READ ALSO: Sánchez meets US ambassador to Spain amid tensions with Trump
Nonetheless, Spain has already given a nod to American independence this year and will host a series of events not only celebrating the big anniversary on July 4th but also Spain's role in it.
The preparations have been long in coming.
Back in March, Queen Sofía opened the ‘America&Spain250’ exhibition in Miami, a project to commemorate the anniversary of independence and highlight “the shared history” between Spain and the United States.
In September 2025, she presided over the opening of another exhibition on the same subject, "Spain and the Birth of American Democracy", organised by the Queen Sofia Spanish Institute (QSSI) in collaboration with the Daughters of the American Revolution.
For more insight into Spain's role in American Independence, the travelling exhibition ‘250 Years: Spaniards at the Birth of a Nation’ is currently on display in La Laguna, in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, until 8th July 2026. It's a roving exhibition that's already been set up in Málaga, Valencia, Barcelona and Menorca and will now continue throughout different places in the Canary Islands now.
Furthermore, this Saturday, 4th July, Madrid and Barcelona will join in the celebrations by illuminating some of their most iconic monuments in red, white and blue.
This will include Barcelona's gherkin-shaped skyscraper Torre Glòries and Madrid's Puerta de Alcalá arch and the Real Casa de Correos, the main building in the capital's central Puerta del Sol square.
The US embassy in Madrid already held an event hosted by US Ambassador to Spain and Andorra, Benjamín León Jr., attended by the President of the Community of Madrid, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, and the city Mayor, José Luis Martínez-Almeida.
More than 1,000 people also attended a reception in Barcelona on Wednesday to mark the 250th anniversary of US independence, organised by the US Consulate General in the Catalan capital.
Another exhibition in Madrid — one of many events focusing on Spain’s role in the American independence movement this year — is on at the Casa de América in Madrid and invites visitors to question the current state of American democracy on the 250th anniversary.
The exhibition, which opened Thursday June 25th and runs until September 30th, is divided into two parts: the first, ‘American Colors’, which analyses the racial makeup of the US, and the second, ‘American Democracy’, which traces the results of every US presidential election throughout the country’s history.
On July 1st, the Rota Naval Base in the southern city of Cádiz hosted a massive joint ceremony featuring over 500 US and Spanish military personnel.
Under a special annual exception to Spanish military base laws, the American flag was raised alongside the Spanish flag.
This was paired with the base's expanded Independence Fest celebrating the Semiquincentennial with local communities.
All this came in the context of recent diplomatic tensions between President Trump and Pedro Sánchez over the Socialist leader's refusal to let American military planes heading to Iran take off from Spain's military bases.
Spain’s National Coinage and Stamp Factory (FNMT - Real Casa de la Moneda) also released a legal tender collector's series titled "250th Anniversary. Spain and the Independence of the USA".
The coins feature coloured motifs of George Washington, King Charles III, the historic Spanish "Piece of Eight" (which influenced the U.S. Dollar), and Menorcan-born Spanish-American military hero Jordi Farragut. The full collection is going for over €4,000.
Of course, there's also the tiny Málaga village that celebrates the 4th of July every year, regardless of whether it's the 250th anniversary or not.
The mountain pueblo of Macharaviaya, around a half-hour drive from Málaga city in the southern region of Andalusia, is the only place in Spain that celebrates American Independence Day.
Every year on July 4th, or the Saturday closest to it, the village of roughly 500 people fills up with thousands of curious tourists and has a battle re-enactment replete with period costumes, gunpowder, bayonets, and even a cannon.
In fact many events are held in the Málaga area as Bernardo de Gálvez, the key Spanish figure in American independence, was from there.
READ ALSO: The Málaga village that celebrates the 4th of July every year
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