Washington, D.C
Hotel Washington Review: DC Cherry Blossom Season Guide | Better Living
Cherry blossom season in DC is one of those trips that rewards getting it right. The peak lasts a week at most, often less, but the full blossom season runs two to three weeks and the window is still spectacular throughout. Where you stay changes everything. That means peak bloom timing, a hotel close enough to walk everywhere, and somewhere worth coming back to at the end of the day. Hotel Washington delivers on all three, and it does so at a level that genuinely justifies the category it is in.
We have been to DC before. We thought we knew what to expect. Cherry blossom season at peak bloom, with the right hotel behind you, turns out to be an entirely different city. Two days, thousands of steps, one unforgettable rooftop dinner, and we left already planning next year.

Hotel Washington has been a DC landmark since 1917, hosting world leaders, celebrities, and dignitaries across more than a century of American history. Elvis stayed here on his way to meet President Nixon at the White House. Harrison Ford reportedly bought drinks for the entire rooftop bar. That same rooftop was also featured in The Godfather Part II.
Today, it’s a Forbes Verified Luxury, 5-star property with 326 rooms and suites, three distinct dining destinations, a full-service spa, and one of the most coveted rooftop views in the country. If you follow our luxury hotel reviews, this one belongs on your radar. The reputation is well earned.
Hotel Washington at a Glance
Location: 515 15th St NW, Washington, DC 20004
Rating: Forbes Verified Luxury · 5-Star Hotel
Price Range: $$$–$$$$
Rooms: 326 rooms and suites, including Monument view options
Parking: Valet via LAZ Parking, $80/night plus tax, with in and out privileges
Destination Fee: $42/night plus tax — includes fitness center, Wi-Fi, $15 Fireclay dining credit, and more
Dining: VUE Rooftop, Fireclay Restaurant and Lobby Bar, The Patio
Amenities: Full-service spa, 24/7 fitness center, in-room Nespresso, rainfall showers, 12,000 sq ft event space
Best For: Cherry blossom season, romantic getaways, DC exploration, food lovers
Worth Knowing: All dining includes a 20% gratuity. Fireclay table seating may be limited during off-peak hours.
Reservations: thehotelwashington.com | (202) 661-2400
Arrival and First Impressions

The lobby lounge at Hotel Washington DC | Photo: Better LivingWe pulled up around 2 p.m., two hours ahead of the standard 4 p.m. check-in. Valet was fast and genuinely friendly, and the front desk held our bags without hesitation and offered to alert us the moment the room was ready. Most hotels make early arrivals feel like an imposition. This one did not. We dropped our bags and headed straight out to start exploring, which felt like exactly the right way to begin a cherry blossom trip.
Walking into the lobby for the first time, the immediate impression is space and light. More open and airy than you might expect from a historic downtown property, with generous seating throughout and an energy that feels welcoming rather than intimidating. The design reveals itself gradually. Black and white checkerboard marble floors. Glowing brass wall panels etched with graphic motifs. Custom illustrations at the front desk that feel equal parts playful and sophisticated.
During cherry blossom season, a full floral installation with a neon Hotel Washington sign takes over one corner of the lobby and becomes an immediate focal point. We stopped to take it in before we had even found the elevator.

The design rewards anyone who pays attention. The lobby arches represent the interest groups commonly lobbied for in the nation’s capital. The constellations inside the elevators map the night sky as it appeared on significant dates in American history, from July 4, 1776 to January 20, 2009. The spiral staircase chandeliers are original to the 1917 opening. Both evenings, stepping outside to find the entrance lit up at night, the floral installation glowing against the dark facade and a cherry red Ferrari parked out front, we stopped and just took it in. Some hotels are just a place to stay. This one is a scene.
💡 Arrival Tip
Check-in is at 4 p.m. but arriving earlier is worth it. Valet is fast, the front desk holds your bags without issue, and they will alert you the moment your room is ready. You can be out exploring within minutes of pulling up.
Cherry Blossom Season: Why This Is the Right Base

Cherry blossom season at the Tidal Basin, Washington DC | Photo: Better LivingWe timed this trip for peak bloom, and peak bloom it was. The Tidal Basin was genuinely packed, more crowded than we anticipated, but the energy of that crowd was something we were not prepared for in the best possible way.
Everyone there, and there were thousands of people from what felt like every corner of the world, was simply happy to be exactly where they were. On a perfect spring day, at full bloom, sharing something beautiful with strangers who all showed up for the same reason. It was one of those rare public experiences where the crowd becomes part of what makes it special rather than something to navigate around.
The cherry blossoms bring a particular kind of joy to the people who come to see them, and being in the middle of that is something worth experiencing at least once.
Why Location Makes All the Difference

Hotel Washington DC entrance with spring floral arch | Photo: Better LivingTraffic in and out of DC during blossom season is not easy to navigate, which is exactly why where you stay matters so much.
Having a hotel you can simply arrive at, hand off the car, and begin walking from changes the entire experience. The Washington Monument is a five-minute walk from the front door. The Tidal Basin is about twenty minutes on foot, with the walk there winding through additional bloom and past several of the city’s most significant memorials. There is no rental car to worry about, no parking situation to solve, no transit to figure out. You are just there, in the middle of it, which is the whole point.
Hotel Washington leans fully into the season and it works. The Cherry Blossom package, available through mid-April, includes a welcome basket with Sakura tea, Japanese Kit Kats, Sakura Mochi candies, and a commemorative magnet, along with a $25 daily dining credit and a $10 donation per booking to the Adopt a Cherry Tree project. It is a rare hotel package where every element makes genuine sense for the moment.
Among the luxury options within walking distance of the Tidal Basin, nothing matches this combination of location, design, and dining.
🌸 Cherry Blossom Tips
Wear comfortable shoes. Plan on two or more hours of walking to do the full Tidal Basin loop and take in the memorials. Sneakers are the right call, full stop. Check our city trip packing tips if you are still putting your bag together.
Bring water and a real camera. The light through the blossoms at the Tidal Basin is worth the extra effort beyond your phone.
Take an Uber to the Jefferson Memorial and walk back. Start at the most iconic view and let the full loop bring you home. Hotel Washington is waiting at the other end.
Go early. Peak bloom lasts only four to seven days. Watch the National Park Service forecast at nps.gov and hit the Tidal Basin before 9 a.m. if you want breathing room. The hotel’s walkability makes the early start genuinely easy.
Book early for rates, not just bloom timing. Spring rates at Hotel Washington reflect the season. The earlier you book, the better your options on both room category and price.
The Monument View King Spa Suite

Monument View King Spa Suite bedroom at Hotel Washington DC | Photo: Better LivingOur room was ready by mid-afternoon and walking into the Monument View King Spa Suite for the first time, it delivered immediately. The suite has a separate living area, a full bedroom, and an oversized marble bathroom, and it is designed with genuine conviction. The coffee and seating area features a floor-to-ceiling mural by artist Amit Greenberg, layered and detailed and the kind of work you keep finding new things in. This suite is fun, comfortable, and stylish.

The living room television takes up the entire wall. It’s huge. The bedroom has a second screen, and the red lacquered bar area holds the Nespresso machine and glassware with seating for four.

But the moment that stayed with us was simpler than any of that. Waking up the first morning and looking up to find the Washington Monument perfectly framed in the bedroom window. That view, with a Lavazza espresso in hand and nowhere to be for another hour, is the kind of thing a hotel room almost never actually delivers. This one did.
The Bathroom

The marble bathroom in the Monument View King Spa Suite at Hotel Washington DC. | Photo: Better LivingThe bathroom was a genuine delight. Full marble surround, a deep freestanding soaking tub that earned its place after a full day of walking the city, a rainfall shower that was as good as it looked, and spa-weight robes waiting on the hook. After two days of covering serious ground on foot, coming back to that bathroom was pure luxury. We slept exceptionally well both nights, which in a downtown city hotel is its own kind of achievement.
Where to Eat and Drink at Hotel Washington

Yellowfin Tuna Crudo at VUE Rooftop, Hotel Washington DC | Photo: Better LivingHotel Washington has two dining experiences worth knowing well. The kitchen across both is led by Executive Chef Jerome Grant, whose approach is rooted in his DMV upbringing and refined through celebrated kitchens. His commitment to Mid-Atlantic ingredients and genuinely intentional cooking shows in every dish. A 20% gratuity is included across all dining, which is worth knowing when you sit down.
Fireclay Restaurant and Lobby Bar

Duck Confit Bao Buns at Fireclay Lobby Bar, Hotel Washington DC. | Photo: Better LivingFireclay is the hotel’s all-day restaurant and lobby bar, and it served us well across two meals. One thing worth knowing: after 2pm the main dining room table seating may be closed, and you will be directed to the bar or high-top tables near the bar instead. We did not know that going in and it was mildly unexpected, though not a problem once we settled in. The bar area is relaxed and comfortable, and for a late afternoon meal after a long day of walking it turned out to be exactly the right energy.
The food at Fireclay is best understood as a genuine hotel restaurant that happens to be very good rather than a destination dining experience in its own right. There are exceptional restaurants all around this hotel, but if you want the full Hotel Washington experience, a signature cocktail and a few dishes at Fireclay is worth doing. The $15 nightly Fireclay credit from the destination fee helps make that easy.

The Spicy Shrimp Bucatini was rich and satisfying, but fair warning: the heat is real. More kick than we expected, which we loved and would order it again without hesitation. The Duck Confit Bao Buns were tender with bright red pepper and cilantro cutting through the richness cleanly. The Hot Crispy Chicken Sandwich arrived sliced, which made sharing easy, and disappeared just as fast, crunchy and saucy with a genuine kick and a sesame bun that held up to all of it. We split everything on that meal and it was exactly the right amount of food. We finished with the Cherry Blossom Shortcake, a seasonal special that was light, creamy, and cooled down the heat.
Breakfast at Fireclay

Mixed Berry Yogurt Bowl at Fireclay Restaurant, Hotel Washington DC. The breakfast that sets the tone for the whole day. | Photo: Better LivingBreakfast on checkout morning was a different experience entirely, and a better one. We sat in the dining area and our server Omar set the tone for the whole meal. Coffee was never less than hot, refills arrived before we thought to ask, and his suggestions when we were undecided turned out to be exactly right. The Mixed Berry Yogurt Bowl with Greek yogurt, seasonal berries, house-made granola, bee pollen, and honey struck a rare balance between indulgent and genuinely nourishing. The Fireclay Omelet with charred tomato, mushrooms, spinach, and cheddar alongside Chef’s potatoes and crispy bacon was a hearty and proper send-off. The Bread Board gave us a few treats to take home. Breakfast here, with the right server and nowhere to rush, is one of those meals that makes a hotel stay feel complete.
What We Ordered at Fireclay
Breakfast
Mixed Berry Yogurt Bowl · Fireclay Omelet with bacon · Bread Board
Late Lunch
Spicy Shrimp Bucatini · Duck Confit Bao Buns · Hot Crispy Chicken Sandwich · Cherry Blossom Shortcake
VUE Rooftop

Crispy Branzino at VUE Rooftop, Hotel Washington DC | Photo: Better LivingVUE Rooftop is consistently ranked among the best rooftops in Washington, DC, and after one dinner here we understand why completely.
We arrived around 6 p.m. to take our time with drinks and appetizers before the sunset, and that timing turned out to be exactly right. The rooftop was buzzing with packed, electric energy, the kind of room where you feel like you are somewhere. Reservations are essential here, particularly during cherry blossom season, and not something to leave until the last minute.
VUE Rooftop is the rare restaurant where the vibe and the food are worth the trip, and the presentations are as stunning as the views.
The view is one of those things that is genuinely difficult to oversell because photographs do not fully prepare you for it. The Washington Monument directly ahead, the White House visible to the right, and then the sky starts to shift color behind everything and the whole city looks like it was arranged just for you.

Every dish had a flavor profile that pleasantly surprised us, more layered and considered than we expected going in. Good portions, beautiful presentations, and nothing that missed. The Yellowfin Tuna Crudo was elegant, fresh, and deliciously colorful. The Coastal Fritto, cornmeal-crusted shrimp and calamari with Calabrian chili mayo was perfectly fried and completely addictive. The Crispy Branzino arrived with the skin still crackling in a light broth with citrus and fennel.

The 48-Hour Smoked Short Rib was the dish of the evening: deeply glazed, fork-tender, with white sweet potato and broccolini and a finish of pickled mustard seed and chives that pulled the whole plate together. The VXB Chocolate Bar with pistachio nougat, date caramel, and pistachio gelato was a showstopper. Do not skip dessert at VUE.

VUE has an impressive cocktail selection and we both ended up ordering the Power to the Peaches with Grey Goose Essences Vodka, Cointreau, Chandon Garden Spritz, chamomile, honey, and lemon. The menu calls it a VUE staple, and that is accurate. It’s refreshing, light, colorful, and paired with everything. Don’t miss it.
We were warmly greeted before we were even seated, and the front desk had set the tone with a table offering an unobstructed view and a welcome that made us feel expected rather than just accommodated. Multiple staff tended to us throughout the evening, which meant someone was always nearby without ever hovering. Every dish that came to the table had been steered by a recommendation, and every recommendation landed.
What We Ordered at VUE Rooftop
To Share
Yellowfin Tuna Crudo · Coastal Fritto
Mains
Crispy Branzino · 48-Hour Smoked Short Rib
Dessert
VXB Chocolate Bar
Cocktails
Power to the Peaches · we both ordered one. Start here.
📋 VUE Reservation Note
Book via OpenTable before you arrive, ideally at the same time you reserve the room. During cherry blossom season this rooftop fills completely. Ask for a window or terrace table and plan to arrive around 6 p.m. to catch the cocktail hour and the sunset in the same sitting.
Day Two: Monuments, Blossoms, and a French Brasserie Around the Corner

Cherry blossoms framing the Washington Monument at the Tidal Basin, Washington DC | Photo: Better LivingOur second day followed a looser rhythm, which is exactly what a good location makes possible. We headed toward the Capitol in the morning, visible straight down Pennsylvania Avenue from the hotel’s corner, one of the great urban walks in America in spring.
From there we moved through the Mall, took an Uber to the Jefferson Memorial, and walked the full Tidal Basin loop back. Starting at the Jefferson and working back is the route we would recommend to anyone. You begin at the most dramatic view, walk with the blossoms the whole way, and the hotel is at the other end waiting.
Lunch at La Grande Boucherie

La Grande Boucherie DC interior, a three minute walk from Hotel Washington | Photo: Better LivingFor lunch we stepped into La Grande Boucherie, a French brasserie around the block from the hotel at 14th and G Street NW.
The space stopped us at the door. Art Nouveau styling, mahogany and glass, a soaring gilded ceiling, and a massive curved bar with a metal top imported from France. It feels like a room from another era, which is entirely the right energy when you are spending two days in a city steeped in history since 1776.
We loved that a restaurant this beautiful is just a three-minute walk from the hotel and transported us right to Paris.

We had the Soupe à l’Oignon, the Croque Monsieur on brioche with Gruyère, and a Steak Sandwich with hand-cut steak, caramelized onions, horseradish aioli, and pommes frites. A thoroughly satisfying midday stop before heading back out.
🥐 Nearby Dining
La Grande Boucherie DC is at 699 14th Street NW, a three-minute walk from Hotel Washington. No reservations needed for weekday lunch. One of the most beautiful dining rooms in the city and a natural stop between blossom walks.
The Spa at Hotel Washington

The Spa at Hotel Washington DC entrance | Photo: Better LivingAt Hotel Washington, the spa is a chic and cozy retreat for face, body, and beauty treatments when you need a little pampering before or after a day of sightseeing.
I booked the Joy of Beauty Signature Facial on our first morning before heading out to explore the cherry blossom hot spots, and it turned out to be one of the best decisions of the trip.
Check-in was friendly and effortless. Comfortable spa flip flops, a locker, and a plush robe waiting to change into. The women’s lounge is modern and genuinely stylish, the kind of space where you feel your shoulders drop the moment you settle in.
Arriving early to spend time there before the appointment, with fruited water and tea and no agenda, was its own quiet pleasure.

My esthetician Zoraya delivered the best facial I have had in a decade. After a long winter, skin tired and dull and in genuine need of hydration, I was ready for something that actually worked. Facials here are bespoke, fully tailored to your individual skin rather than following a set protocol.
Zoraya analyzed quickly, recommended a microdermabrasion treatment followed by a hydrating mask, and it was exactly the right call. Using Comfort Zone products, made in Italy and formulated for visible results, she left my skin looking and feeling more hydrated than it had in months. Zero irritation, zero downtime, and the facial included a hand, neck, and arm massage that made the whole experience feel genuinely restorative.
Afterward, mint water and a chocolate-covered strawberry arrived in the lounge. That simple touch ended the visit perfectly. I left feeling like a million dollars and would book here again without a second thought.
✨ Spa Tips
Request Zoraya for your facial. She is a genuine skin whisperer and the best I have encountered in years.
Arrive early and complete the emailed intake form in advance so you can focus entirely on relaxing. The lounge time before your treatment is worth building in.
Ask about the Trager Method. Hotel Washington is the only property in DC with a certified practitioner of this full-body tension release treatment. Worth booking if you have the time.
Is Hotel Washington Worth It for Cherry Blossom Season?

Washington Monument surrounded by cherry blossoms in spring, Washington DC | Photo: Better LivingYes. DC during peak bloom rewards getting it right. The blossoms wait for no one, traffic is a genuine obstacle, and the difference between staying in the right place and the wrong one is the difference between a stressful sightseeing day and a trip you actually enjoy. Hotel Washington eliminates the friction entirely. You arrive, you hand off the car, and you start walking. That alone elevates the whole experience.
What Stood Out Most
The suite was genuinely comfortable and full of artistic intention. The rooftop is among the best in the city, full stop, and the dining across both VUE and Fireclay is worth your time rather than just your convenience. The spa delivered one of the most memorable facials we have had anywhere. And the details, Omar keeping the coffee hot at breakfast, Zoraya knowing exactly what our skin needed, the valet having the car ready before we finished checking out, are where this hotel earns its Forbes rating. None of it happened by accident.
There are fees to know going in, all detailed in the at-a-glance box above. None of it felt unreasonable at this level, and the destination fee in particular returns genuine value. Go in clear-eyed and checkout will feel like the right end to a very good trip.
If you want to visit DC to see the cherry blossoms, this truly is the place to do it. You are right in the heart of everything, the hotel makes a meaningful celebration of the season, and having a beautiful room and an exceptional rooftop waiting for you at the end of a long day of walking makes the whole trip feel more special. This is the right hotel for couples who want to be in the middle of the experience rather than adjacent to it. If you have been thinking about a city weekend as a wellness reset, cherry blossom season in DC with a stay like this is exactly that. We are already talking about coming back. Probably for the same suite. Definitely for VUE. And almost certainly for one more Power to the Peaches at sunset.
The Bottom Line
Hotel Washington is the right place to experience cherry blossom season in DC. Forbes Verified Luxury, 5-star service, a history stretching back to 1917, and a location that puts the entire city within walking distance. The suite, the rooftop, the spa, and the staff all deliver at the level the rating promises. Factor in the destination fee, valet, and included gratuity when budgeting. Go in prepared and you will leave the way we did: already planning the next visit.
Best for: Couples, romantic getaways, cherry blossom season, food lovers, spa seekers
Worth knowing: $42/night destination fee, $80 valet, 20% gratuity on all dining, Fireclay table seating limited during off-peak hours
Book your stay: thehotelwashington.com | (202) 661-2400
Hotel Washington DC: Frequently Asked Questions
When is peak cherry blossom bloom in Washington DC?
Peak bloom typically falls between late March and early April, though exact timing varies by year and weather. The National Park Service tracks blossom development in real time at nps.gov and publishes forecasts as the season approaches. Peak bloom lasts roughly four to seven days, so timing matters. Book early and watch the forecast.
Do you need reservations for VUE Rooftop at Hotel Washington?
Yes, particularly during cherry blossom season. VUE fills completely during peak bloom. Book via OpenTable before you arrive, ideally at the same time you reserve your room. Ask for a window or terrace table and plan to arrive around 6 p.m. to catch both the cocktail hour and the sunset.
Is parking available at Hotel Washington DC?
Yes. The hotel offers valet parking through LAZ Parking with in and out privileges, billed directly to your room folio. The garage has a height restriction so confirm in advance if you are driving an oversized vehicle.
Is the spa at Hotel Washington open to non-guests?
Yes. The Spa at Hotel Washington welcomes both hotel guests and locals. Reservations can be made online through the hotel website. If you are booking a facial, request Zoraya specifically.
What else is there to do beyond cherry blossom season in Washington DC?
Quite a lot. From history, dining, museums there are many things to do in Washington DC. Also see our guide to day trips from Washington DC which covers the best options if you are extending your stay or planning a visit outside of blossom season.
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Washington, D.C
Vans Warped Tour Day One at RFK Festival Grounds in Washington, DC – Loud Hailer Magazine
Despite the hottest temperatures of the season, fans packed Washington, D.C.’s RFK Festival Grounds for an unforgettable kickoff to Vans Warped Tour 2026.
The two-day event captured everything that has made Warped Tour a cultural institution for three decades: a diverse lineup spanning punk, emo, hardcore, ska, alternative rock, and everything in between—from the Scumdogs of the Universe, GWAR, to the Juggalos of Insane Clown Posse. It was an atmosphere built on community, discovery, and a passionate fanbase willing to brave the elements for the music they love. From legendary acts that helped define generations to emerging artists making their Warped Tour debut, the festival delivered nonstop energy across its stages while continuing its tradition of bringing together music, skate culture, charitable organizations, and fans from all walks of life.
Doors opened at 11 AM, and fans immediately sprinted toward the coveted red inflatable schedule board to find out who was playing, where, and when. It’s one of the few mysteries left in modern entertainment. There are no official leaks, no advance schedules posted online—just fans piecing together clues from tour dates and social media posts in hopes of predicting who will be playing each day. The diehard Warped Tour faithful love the tradition. For newer fans raised on instant information, it takes some getting used to, but once they experience the excitement of discovering the lineup in real time, many quickly understand why it’s such a beloved part of the festival.
One theme echoed throughout the festival grounds all day long: it’s a dream to be here. Band after band spoke about growing up attending Warped Tour or dreaming of one day performing on its stages. For many artists, that dream became a reality this weekend. At the same time, longtime fans who grew up with Warped Tour were sharing the experience with a new generation, bringing their children and younger family members to experience the culture, community, and music that shaped so many summers. Perhaps somewhere in the crowd was the next generation of musicians, discovering the same dream that inspired so many of the artists performing this weekend.
One of the first bands we caught after arriving at Warped Tour was Girlfriends on the main stage, and they immediately brought a burst of energy to the festival grounds. Their set balanced infectious pop-punk anthems with emotionally charged lyrics, as fans sang along to favorites like “MOUTH LIKE A LOADED GUN,” “GOOD LUCK,” and “Where Were You.” The duo kept the momentum rolling with “Jessica” before treating the crowd to a nostalgic cover of Blink-182’s “What’s My Age Again?” that had fans of all ages joining in. Closing out with “Tattoo” and “California,” Girlfriends delivered the kind of upbeat, feel-good performance that perfectly captured the spirit of Warped Tour and set the tone for the rest of the day on the festival’s main stage.
Next up was The Wrecks, who brought an infectious burst of energy to the stage that perfectly matched the spirit of Warped Tour. The band had fans moving from the start with “Freaking Out,” before delivering a spirited cover of Jet’s “Are You Gonna Be My Girl.” Crowd favorites, including “Out of Style,” “James Dean,” and “Favorite Liar,” turned the set into one massive sing-along, showcasing the band’s knack for blending catchy hooks with high-energy performances. Their charismatic stage presence and connection with the audience made them one of the day’s standout acts.
The Home Team showcased the melodic sound and polished musicianship that have helped them build a growing fanbase. Highlights included fan favorites “Hell,” “Brag,” “Slow Bloom,” and “Somebody Else’s Face,” with the crowd responding strongly throughout the set. The band’s blend of pop-punk, rock, and R&B influences stood out on the Warped Tour lineup, while “Loud” and set closer “Worthy” provided memorable moments for longtime fans and newcomers alike.
Thrice delivered one of our most anticipated sets of the weekend, reminding fans why they remain one of the most respected and influential bands in post-hardcore. Opening with the iconic “The Artist in the Ambulance,” the band immediately had the crowd engaged before rolling through fan favorites including “Yellow Belly,” “Black Honey,” and “In Exile.” Over the course of more than two decades, Thrice has continually evolved their sound, expanding far beyond their post-hardcore roots while maintaining the songwriting and musicianship that first earned them a devoted following. That evolution was on full display throughout the set, which seamlessly blended material from across their extensive catalog. The band closed with “The Earth Will Shake,” sending fans out on a high note and providing a fitting end to one of the weekend’s most anticipated performances.
Underoath delivered a crowd-pleasing set packed with the songs that helped make them one of the defining bands of the Warped Tour era. Fan favorites, including “It’s Dangerous Business Walking Out Your Front Door,” “Reinventing Your Exit,” and “Down, Set, Go,” had longtime listeners singing along throughout the performance. The band’s signature blend of melody and intensity was on full display, while set closer “A Boy Brushed Red Living in Black and White” provided a nostalgic ending that reminded fans why Underoath remains such an important part of the scene.
Sleeping With Sirens delivered a nostalgic trip through the songs that helped define a generation of Warped Tour fans. Frontman Kellin Quinn’s unmistakable vocals led the crowd through fan favorites including “The Bomb Dot Com V2.0,” “A Trophy Father’s Trophy Son,” “Do It Now Remember It Later,” and “If I’m James Dean, You’re Audrey Hepburn.” The loudest sing-alongs came during the closing stretch, as thousands of fans joined in for every word of “If You Can’t Hang,” proving that Sleeping With Sirens remains one of the most beloved bands to emerge from the Warped Tour scene.
Taking Back Sunday leaned heavily into nostalgia during their Warped Tour appearance, delivering the songs that helped define an entire generation of emo and pop-punk fans. While the set spanned multiple eras of the band’s catalog, it was the classics that transformed the RFK Festival Grounds into one massive sing-along. “You’re So Last Summer” had fans screaming every word back at the stage, while “A Decade Under the Influence” showcased the emotional intensity and infectious hooks that made the band a staple of the early 2000s scene. The energy reached another level during “Cute Without the ‘E’ (Cut From the Team),” as thousands of voices joined Adam Lazzara for one of the genre’s most iconic anthems. Closing with “MakeDamnSure,” Taking Back Sunday delivered the perfect ending to a hit-filled set, proving that their songs remain just as powerful and beloved today as they were during Warped Tour‘s original run.
Third Eye Blind proved that great songs never go out of style, drawing one of the largest and most diverse crowds of the day. The band’s set expertly balanced newer material with the hits that have defined their career, including “Never Let You Go,” “Graduate,” “Losing a Whole Year,” and the always emotional “Motorcycle Drive By.” Late in the set, frontman Stephan Jenkins paused to acknowledge the incredible energy coming from the audience, explaining that the passion and atmosphere they were experiencing at Warped Tour had helped inspire the band’s upcoming album. He told the crowd that he hoped fans would welcome Third Eye Blind back next year, a sentiment that was met with enthusiastic cheers. Fans then sang every word to “Jumper” before joining together for a powerful rendition of David Bowie’s “Heroes.” The celebration reached its peak with the unmistakable opening notes of “Semi-Charmed Life,” turning the festival grounds into a massive sing-along, while “How’s It Going to Be” provided a fitting and nostalgic close to a set that showcased exactly why Third Eye Blind continues to connect with audiences nearly three decades after their debut.
Few bands embody the spirit of Warped Tour quite like The Used, and their set was a chaotic, emotional, and unforgettable highlight of the weekend. Opening with “Pretty Handsome Awkward” and “Take It Away,” the band immediately ignited the crowd before rolling through fan favorites including “The Bird and the Worm,” “Buried Myself Alive,” and “I Caught Fire.” Frontman Bert McCracken remained as charismatic and outspoken as ever, using the stage not only to connect with fans but also to voice his thoughts on the current political climate. Before launching into “F**k You,” McCracken dedicated the song to political figures and issues he felt deserved the message, encouraging the crowd to raise their middle fingers in the air as thousands enthusiastically joined in. The energy continued to build through “Blow Me,” “Sound Effects and Overdramatics,” and a dramatic performance of “Blood on My Hands,” complete with its signature Macbeth-inspired introduction. As the set neared its conclusion, fans screamed every word to “The Taste of Ink” before The Used closed with “A Box Full of Sharp Objects,” incorporating an outro of Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” that sent the crowd into one final frenzy. It was a reminder of why The Used remain one of the defining bands of the Warped Tour generation.
Rise Against had the honor of closing out the first day of Vans Warped Tour, and the Chicago punk rock veterans delivered a set worthy of the occasion. Opening with “Re-Education (Through Labor),” the band immediately commanded the attention of a crowd that had endured hours of heat and nonstop music. Favorites including “Satellite,” “Give It All,” “Help Is on the Way,” and “Ready to Fall” kept the energy high, while “The Good Left Undone” and “Prayer of the Refugee” inspired massive sing-alongs across the festival grounds. A stripped-down performance of “Swing Life Away” provided a brief moment of reflection before the band launched back into high gear with “Chamber the Cartridge” and set closer “Savior,” which brought thousands of voices together one final time.
As the last notes faded into the warm Washington night, it was hard to believe that fans had experienced just one day of the festival. With more than 60 bands performing across multiple stages, day one offered everything from legendary Warped Tour veterans to emerging artists making their mark on a new generation of fans. If the opening day was any indication, Warped Tour‘s return is proving to be more than a nostalgic reunion; it’s a reminder that the festival’s spirit of discovery, community, and live music remains alive and well. And with an entire second day still ahead, there was plenty more music, memories, and surprises waiting to unfold.
VANS WARPED TOUR
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Washington, D.C
Kenyan McDuffie concedes DC mayoral primary to Janeese Lewis George
WASHINGTON – Washington, D.C., mayoral candidate Kenyan McDuffie on Thursday conceded the Democratic primary race to Janeese Lewis George.
Although the official certification of the primary race is continuing, McDuffie said in a statement that “it is clear that the voters have chosen a different path.” The former member of the D.C. council said he had contacted Lewis George and congratulated her. He thanked his supporters and urged them to continue working for the city.
“The campaign may be over, but the work of building a safer, more affordable, more prosperous city continues.”
The Associated Press has not declared a winner in the race. Lewis George had a little less than 53% of the vote Thursday morning, which is just a few percentage points above the 50% threshold to avoid ranked choice voting.
The city is scheduled to release preliminary ranked choice voting results on Sunday. AP will call the race before then if it is clear that the ranked choice process will be avoided.
Lewis George has pledged to aggressively stand up to federal intervention into Washington, D.C.’s, affairs, setting up a potential showdown with President Donald Trump over his administration’s moves to challenge the city’s limited autonomy.
If the results stand, Lewis George is likely to win November’s general election in the heavily Democratic city. The winner in the general election will replace Muriel Bowser, who decided not to run again after three terms.
Lewis George would join Robert White Jr., who won the Democratic primary for the district’s delegate to Congress, as the top local officials who likely will contend with the federal government’s intentions for the city. They each campaigned on a promise to take a harder line than their predecessors against the Trump administration’s moves on the district, including its deployment of the National Guard on an ongoing, open-ended mission meant to fight crime.
“As mayor, I will work with anyone who makes D.C. safer,” Lewis George told a crowd of cheering supporters Tuesday night, “but I will also stand up to Trump.”
Washington has limited autonomy and federal leaders retain significant control over local affairs, including approval of the budget and laws passed by the D.C. Council.
Trump further encroached on that autonomy last year when he briefly federalized the city’s police force and deployed an ongoing law enforcement surge that included the National Guard. His efforts to downsize the federal government also roiled the capital region, costing thousands of people their jobs. And he has been reshaping the city by renovating storied landmarks and putting his name or image on buildings.
Lewis George, a self-described democratic socialist and a member of the D.C. Council, has already come under fire from Trump, who last week threatened to place the city under federal control if she won.
“Maybe we’d take back Washington, run it on the federal basis,” he said.
Lewis George, 38, and a third generation Washingtonian, has vowed to overrule an executive order by the city’s police chief permitting local law enforcement to cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. Lewis George argued the order “hurt the trust of our community.”
She also pledged to use any levers available to her through the city’s home rule compact to resist what she called authoritarian infringements on the district’s local governance.
“We have legal tools we can use to fight back,” she told the AP in an interview before the vote. “And we know that when we have gone to court, we’ve won.”
Bowser found herself walking a fine line between staying in Trump’s good graces and responding to the concerns of constituents, many of whom said she didn’t push back hard enough on Trump’s actions. Eleanor Holmes Norton, the 18-term, 89-year-old delegate to Congress, meanwhile, faced mounting concern from critics who said she wasn’t forcefully pushing back on the Trump administration’s moves against the city.
Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
Washington, D.C
Janeese Lewis George leads vote count in Washington, DC Democratic mayoral primary
Darren Lyn
18 June 2026•Update: 18 June 2026
Democratic socialist Janeese Lewis George currently leads the vote tally as of Wednesday versus six other candidates in the Washington, DC Democratic mayoral primary, and if victorious, could be following in the footsteps of the most notable democratic socialist in the United States — New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani.
With 73% of the ballots counted since Tuesday’s primary election in the nation’s capital, the Associated Press (AP) has Lewis George leading with 52.9% of the vote. Her closest challenger is Kenyan McDuffie, who currently holds 36.5%.
The mayor’s office in the District of Columbia has traditionally been a Democratic stronghold, and political experts have said that any Republican challenger is not expected to put up meaningful competition for the mayor’s seat in the general election.
If Lewis George keeps her current lead and wins the majority, she will head to the November election as the favorite to replace three-term Mayor Muriel Bowser, who decided not to run for a fourth term.
A victory for Lewis George would be to the ire of US President Donald Trump, who told reporters that he could attempt a federal takeover of Washington if she won the mayor’s race, according to local media reports.
“We won’t put up with it,” Trump told reporters at a news conference.
Yet Trump has already seen a democratic socialist take power in America’s largest city, with the election of Mamdani as mayor of New York City.
Not to be outdone, the race for the mayor’s office in Los Angeles, California — the second largest city in the US by population — has a democratic socialist, Nithya Raman, in the runoff to vie for the position in November’s general election. Raman will face incumbent Democratic Mayor Karen Bass, who narrowly edged out Raman in the primary 34.3% to 29.0%.
In California’s 14th congressional district, two candidates will head to a runoff election to replace former US Rep. Eric Swalwell, who resigned from Congress in April amid allegations of sexual assault, including rape.
Aisha Wahab secured the first runoff spot on Tuesday with 38.3% of the vote, with the AP on Wednesday calling the second position to go to Melissa Hernandez, who tallied 17.2%.
The runoff election will be held on Aug. 18, with the winner finishing out the rest of Swalwell’s term.
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