Official Pride Colors 2025: Exact Color Codes for 15 Pride Flags

The 'Progress Rainbow' features 11 unique colors, learn all of the pride colors in this guide

Official Pride Colors 2025: Exact Color Codes for 15 Pride Flags

The message and impact of Pride continue to grow stronger each year, uplifting more voices and identities that have long been marginalized or erased. While the rainbow flag is still a central symbol of unity, each LGBTQIA+ group has its own flag, representing the distinct experiences and histories within the community.

For every group celebrated in Pride, there is a distinctive flag (or sometimes several!) to represent them, with its own colors, style, and design. There are too many identity groups to catalogue comprehensively, but I’ll provide 15 commonly used Pride flags with their precise color hex codes, so you can implement the exact hues in your Pride designs and graphics.

Whether you're sampling colors from an existing image or creating pride content from scratch, using an online editor is the fastest way to create new media.


Table of Contents


Classic Rainbow

Graphic showing the classic rainbow pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Classic Rainbow flag is iconic for its use in LGBT+ culture.

The original rainbow that Harvey Milk commissioned from Gilbert Baker in 1977 had 8 stripes, then it was updated later with only 7. Now, you’re most likely to see a simplified 6-stripe version emblazoned on any and all Pride-themed designs.

It’s meant to be all-inclusive, but all identities deserve to be recognized on their own – each of the other flags below is just as important as the rainbow.


Progress Rainbow

Graphic showing the Progress Rainbow pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Progress Rainbow features a more inclusive design to support traditionally marginalized groups.

All aspects of identity intersect with one another both individually and politically, as acknowledged in Daniel Quasar's Progress flag, a redesign of the 6-stripe rainbow. With the additional Black & Brown stripes, as well as the colors of the transgender flag, this flag draws attention to to interconnected struggles of all LGBTQIA+ identities and BIPOC.


Transgender Flag

Graphic showing the Transgender pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Transgender Flag features just three repeating colors in its design.

In 2022, the rights of trans people in the US is still being jeopardized, so this Pride is the stage for an especially defiant stand against the record number of anti-trans bills going through state legislatures this year.

The trans flag was created by Monica Helms all the way back in 1999, and features an iconic pastel blue and pink colorway, instantly recognizable when incorporated into any design.


Bisexual Flag

Graphic showing the Bisexual pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Bisexual flag features three colors with uneven spacing as a sort of stylized Venn-diagram.

The internet favorite “bisexual lighting” is a moody, theatrical application of the bi flag itself, combining a muted blue with an extra-warm pink, blending the two tones in the middle. This timeless design is one of the more long-standing Pride flags out there, created by Michael Page in 1998.


Pansexual Flag

Graphic showing the Pansexual pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Pansexual flag features three evenly spaced colors with high-contrast.

Many people identify as bisexual and/or pansexual, and feel represented by either term. The pan flag itself is less widely known than the classic rainbow and bi flags, but its vibrant pink, yellow, and blue are instantly recognizable once you’ve seen them.


Gender Nonbinary Flag

Graphic showing the Nonbinary pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Nonbinary flag features four distinct colors.

Gender is a spectrum, with a lot more flux and dimension than an enforced binary. The NB flag was created by the 17-year-old Kye Rowan, nodding toward the agender spectrum with its near-black and near-white shades, and it has been in use since 2014.


Lesbian Flag

Graphic showing the Lesbian pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The current Lesbian pride flag features a gradient across five colors.

Lesbian flags have gone through many different modifications, iterations, and debates since the late ‘90’s. One of the most popular and inclusive versions is this one created in 2018, with two or three shades of magenta and burnt sienna mirroring each other across a white center.


Agender Flag

Graphic showing the Agender pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Agender flag features four unique colors across seven horizontal layers.

Salem X designed the agender flag to represent a broad scope of gender identities, with the grayscale stripes encompassing any lack or combination of gender identities, and the green standing for nonbinary gender. As with the trans flag, it’s impossible to display the agender flag upside-down!


Asexual Flag

Graphic showing the Asexual pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Asexual flag uses both true white and true black, with the addition of two other unique colors.

The asexual, or “ace,” orientation includes everyone who doesn’t feel sexual attraction to other people, or whose sexual attraction is especially mild. The colors and design of the asexual flag encompass all of its varied identites, including graysexual and demisexual, shown in the gray stripe.


Demisexual Flag

Graphic showing the Demisexual pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Demisexual flag features nearly the same colors as the Asexual flag, but in a different orientation.

The demisexual flag represents people who feel sexual connection that is closely related to other connections, such as romantic connection. As part of the asexual spectrum, the demisexual flag reworks the color scheme of the asexual flag into an original design.


Genderqueer Flag

Graphic showing the Genderqueer pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Genderqueer flag features three distinct colors.

Marilyn Roxie’s unique genderqueer flag is considered another form of nonbinary flag, representing those whose gender identity exists anywhere outside the gender binary. Specifically, the sage green stands for nonbinary gender, the white represents agender, and the lavender indicates androgeny.


Genderfluid Flag

Graphic showing the Genderfluid pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Genderfluid flag includes true white and true black, along with three other unique colors.

Genderfluidity acknowledges that gender can shift and evolve over time, and that gender intersects with other aspects of identity and expression in dynamic ways. Created by JJ Poole in 2012, the genderfluid flag combines various hues between pink and blue, plus black and white stripes.


Intersex Flag

The Intersex flag uses a unique design without any horizontal stripes.
Graphic showing the Intersex pride flag with color codes for each featured color.

The intersex flag acknowledges that sex and sex characteristics, too, are nonbinary spectra. Its colors and design, established in 2013, are entirely distinct from most of the flags in this list in order to distinguish it entirely from binary gender iconography.


Aromantic Flag

Graphic showing the Aromantic flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Aromantic flag features a simplified version of the Agender flag.

The aromantic flag reworks the visual language of the agender flag, acknowledging the interplay of sexual, romantic, and other attractions, and representing both those who experience sexual attraction and aroace people.


Polyamory Flag

Graphic showing the Polyamory pride flag with color codes for each featured color.
The Polyamory flag features four colors, along with the pi symbol directly centered.

The traditional polyamory flag uses the pi symbol, whose infinite and non-repeating digits represent the infinite romantic and sexual attractions, relationships, and partners of polyamorous people. Its colors are extremely bright: the three pure primary colors, and pure black.


In Conclusion

This list is nowhere near a comprehensive or exhaustive list of Pride flags — it merely showcases some of the best-known flags out there. If you want to use the hex codes in these flags for your own design, or find a color hex code in a flag that isn't on this list, I recommend using Kapwing, where you can use precise colors for any image, GIF, or video design.

Example image editor showing an example pride flag with custom designed text.
Quickly create pride graphics by adding text with sampled colors.

In the Studio, you can make custom text, shapes, transparent overlays, image and video frames, and even subtitles using any of the exact color codes from this list. Plus, you can upload any Pride flag you want and use the eye dropper tool to identify its colors for your designs.

Here's an example using the lesbian flag:

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I hope this article helps you add your own voice and identity to the struggle and celebration of Pride 2025!

For more tips and tutorials on creating modern digital content in 2025, check out the Kapwing YouTube channel.