The best movies to watch on Independence Day aren’t always the ones about independence, which is why Jaws, a film about a shark eating tourists during a Fourth of July weekend, keeps outranking earnest Revolutionary War dramas on lists like this one. A great July 4th movie just has to feel like the holiday: loud, warm, a little sentimental, and best enjoyed with too much food.
This year raises the stakes. July 4, 2026, marks America’s 250th birthday, the Semiquincentennial, and streamers have leaned in hard with anniversary watch guides and new founding-era titles. So this list mixes both: the certified holiday classics you rewatch every year and a couple of newcomers earning their spot in the rotation.
One note before the countdown: streaming homes shift constantly, so I’ve noted where each film streams as of early July 2026, but check before you commit the evening.
How This List Was Picked
Three filters, applied honestly. Rewatch value first, because a July 4th movie competes with fireworks, barbecue, and half-distracted living rooms, so it has to work even when you’ve seen it five times. Holiday fit second, meaning either the film is set around the Fourth, tells an American story worth the date, or simply radiates summer. Crowd range is third, because the best picks survive a room containing your grandmother, your nephew, and that one friend who narrates plot holes.
The 12 Best Movies to Watch on Independence Day in 2026
1. Independence Day (1996)
Starting anywhere else would be dishonest. Roland Emmerich’s alien-invasion blockbuster is the July 4th movie by name, by release date, and by the sheer commitment of Bill Pullman’s presidential speech, still quoted at barbecues 30 years later. Will Smith punching an alien and lighting a cigar remains one of the great “movie star at full power” moments of the ’90s. It’s ridiculous; it knows it’s ridiculous, and it plays perfectly to a full living room. The 2016 sequel exists; you’re free to pretend otherwise.
2. Jaws (1975)
Steven Spielberg’s shark thriller is set over a Fourth of July weekend on Amity Island, where a mayor keeps the beaches open for holiday tourism against all sane advice. That makes it, technically, one of cinema’s great Independence Day films and, practically, the best summer movie ever made. The first blockbuster, the two-note score everyone can hum, and a final act on the Orca that hasn’t aged a day. If your holiday runs to sundown, this is the after-dark pick.
3. Hamilton (2020)
The filmed Broadway production landed on Disney+ over July 4th weekend in 2020, and it’s been holiday-appropriate viewing ever since. Lin-Manuel Miranda’s musical compresses the founding era, war, the Constitution, cabinet battles, and one very consequential duel into under three hours of some of the sharpest lyrics ever put to American history. For the 250th anniversary specifically, nothing on this list connects the actual events of 1776 to a modern audience better.
4. 1776 (1972)
The deep cut that earns its place this year more than any other. This musical adaptation of the Broadway show dramatizes the debates inside the Continental Congress in the weeks before the Declaration, with William Daniels as a gloriously irritating John Adams. It’s talky, it’s theatrical, and it’s the only film on this list actually about the thing the holiday commemorates. In the Semiquincentennial year, it’s practically homework, but the fun kind.
5. National Treasure (2004)
Nicolas Cage steals the Declaration of Independence. That sentence has powered two decades of rewatches, and the film around it holds up as the best history-adjacent adventure Hollywood has produced this century: treasure maps, Founding Father trivia, Sean Bean being suspicious. It’s the perfect afternoon slot on July 4th, engaging enough for adults, clean enough for kids, and secretly effective at making American history feel like a puzzle worth solving.
6. Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942)
The oldest film here and still one of the most purely joyful. James Cagney won the Best Actor Oscar playing George M. Cohan, the songwriter behind “You’re a Grand Old Flag” and “Over There,” and his stiff-legged dance style is a thing you have to see rather than read about. Made during World War II as deliberate morale fuel, it wears its flag-waving openly, and on this one day a year, that’s exactly the assignment.
7. Glory (1989)
The serious pick and the essential one. Edward Zwick’s Civil War drama follows the 54th Massachusetts, the Union’s first all-Black regiment, with Denzel Washington winning his first Oscar and Morgan Freeman anchoring the ensemble. It’s the film on this list that asks the hardest questions about what the country’s founding promises actually meant and who had to fight to be included in them. Not the barbecue backdrop; the one you actually sit down and watch.
8. Miracle (2004)
The 1980 US Olympic hockey team beating the Soviets, with Kurt Russell delivering a career-best performance as coach Herb Brooks. Sports movies are a July 4th food group of their own, and Miracle is the best of the genre: an underdog story that’s true, a locker-room speech that earns its goosebumps, and a final period you’ll sweat through even knowing the score. Extra resonance in 2026, an Olympic year in which the US men took hockey gold again.
9. The Sandlot (1993)
The Fourth of July scene in The Sandlot, kids playing night baseball under fireworks while Ray Charles sings “America the Beautiful,” might be the single most July 4th moment ever filmed. The rest of the movie matches it: a nostalgic summer of baseball, a legendary beast of a dog, and “You’re killing me, Smalls,” which entered the language permanently. The family slot on this list, and honestly, the pick most likely to make adults misty.
10. Top Gun: Maverick (2022)
The film widely credited with dragging audiences back into theaters after the pandemic is also a shameless, expertly built piece of American spectacle. Tom Cruise doing real aerial photography, a story that’s basically Star Wars with F-18s, and a crowd-pleasing final act that works on the tenth viewing. If your July 4th gathering wants pure adrenaline with zero homework, this is the modern default, and it earned that status honestly.
11. Hidden Figures (2016)
The Space Race told through the mathematicians who made it possible: Katherine Johnson, Dorothy Vaughan, and Mary Jackson, played by Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, and Janelle Monáe. It’s a crowd-pleaser in the best sense, genuinely uplifting without being soft, and it widens the definition of an American hero in a way that suits the 250th anniversary’s whole “who built this country” conversation. One of the safest full-family picks made in the last decade.
12. Born on the Fourth of July (1989)
Ending with the counterweight. Oliver Stone’s biopic of Vietnam veteran Ron Kovic, with Tom Cruise in the performance that proved he could act, is literally titled for the holiday and spends two and a half hours interrogating what patriotism costs. It won Stone his second Best Director Oscar. Not every July 4th watchlist needs it, but the honest ones include it, because loving a country and questioning it have never been opposites, and this film is the proof.
New for the 250th: What’s Worth Adding in 2026
The Semiquincentennial has produced a wave of new founding-era content, and a couple of picks stand out from the noise. Netflix released a five-part documentary series directed by Brian Knappenberger that reexamines the nation’s founding and the question of whether a people can govern itself, featuring voices from across the political spectrum, an unusually bipartisan approach for 2026, and a strong pairing with 1776 if you want the dramatized and documentary versions side by side. Disney+ has also assembled a dedicated Fourth of July watch guide built around the 250th anniversary, which is the easiest place to find National Treasure, Hamilton, and Miracle in one app. Netflix TudumDisney+
They’re series and collections rather than films, so they sit outside the ranking, but if your holiday viewing stretches across the whole weekend, they’ve earned the queue slot.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) on Movies to Watch on Independence Day
1. What is the most popular movie to watch on July 4th?
Independence Day (1996) remains the default pick, for the obvious reason that it’s named after the holiday and climaxes on July 4th. Jaws and Top Gun: Maverick are the strongest challengers in most household rotations.
2. What movies are actually set on the Fourth of July?
Independence Day, Jaws, Born on the Fourth of July, and The Sandlot all feature the holiday directly in their stories. 1776 and Hamilton depict the founding events the holiday commemorates.
3. What’s a good Independence Day movie for kids?
The Sandlot and National Treasure are the safest family picks on this list. Hidden Figures works well for slightly older kids and doubles as a genuinely inspiring history lesson.
4. Is there anything new to watch for America’s 250th anniversary?
Yes. 2026 brought a wave of semiquincentennial titles, including Netflix’s five-part founding documentary series and curated 250th-anniversary collections on Disney+ and other major streamers.
Final Word on the Best Movies to Watch on Independence Day
The best movies to watch on Independence Day cover more range than the flag-heavy stereotype suggests: a shark, a duel, a hockey team, a stolen founding document, and one kid losing a baseball signed by Babe Ruth. That range is sort of the point. The holiday is big enough for spectacle and reflection in the same evening, and in the 250th anniversary year, the double feature writes itself: 1776 while the light’s still good and Jaws when it gets dark.
If your July 4th rotation includes something this list skipped, the Patriot loyalists, I see you; drop it in the comments. The list gets an update every year, and the case for entry is always open.






