"LGBT right" redirects here. For the right-wing LGBT movement, see
LGBT conservatism .
Worldwide laws regarding same-sex intercourse, unions and expression
Same-sex intercourse illegal. Penalties: Prison; death not enforced
Death under militias
Prison, with arrests or detention
Prison, not enforced1
Same-sex intercourse legal. Recognition of unions: Extraterritorial marriage2
Limited foreign
Optional certification
None
Restrictions of expression
Restrictions of association with arrest or detention
Rings indicate local or case-by-case application.
1 No imprisonment in the past three years or moratorium on law. 2 Marriage not available locally. Some jurisdictions may perform other types of partnerships.
LGBT rights at the United Nations
Neither States which did not support either declaration
Non-member states States that are not voting members of the United Nations
Oppose States which supported an opposing declaration in 2008 and continued their opposition in 2011
Subsequent member South Sudan, did not exist in 2008
Support States which supported the LGBT rights declaration in the General Assembly or on the Human Rights Council in 2008 or 2011
Rights affecting lesbian , gay , bisexual , and transgender (LGBT ) people vary greatly by country or jurisdiction—encompassing everything from the legal recognition of same-sex marriage to the death penalty for homosexuality .
Laws concerning gender identity-expression by country or territory Legal identity change, surgery not required
Legal identity change, surgery required
No legal identity change
Unknown/Ambiguous
Notably, as of May 2024[update] , 37 countries recognize same-sex marriage .[1] [2] By contrast, not counting non-state actors and extrajudicial killings, only two countries are believed to impose the death penalty on consensual same-sex sexual acts: Iran and Afghanistan .[3] [4] [5] [6] The death penalty is officially law , but generally not practiced , in Mauritania , Saudi Arabia , Somalia (in the autonomous state of Jubaland ) and the United Arab Emirates .[7] [8] LGBT people also face extrajudicial killings in the Russian region of Chechnya .[9] Sudan rescinded its unenforced death penalty for anal sex (hetero- or homosexual) in 2020. Fifteen countries have stoning on the books as a penalty for adultery , which (in light of the illegality of gay marriage in those countries) would by default include gay sex, but this is enforced by the legal authorities in Iran and Nigeria (in the northern third of the country).[10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
In 2011, the United Nations Human Rights Council passed its first resolution recognizing LGBT rights, following which the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights issued a report documenting violations of the rights of LGBT people, including hate crimes , criminalization of homosexual activity , and discrimination . Following the issuance of the report, the United Nations urged all countries which had not yet done so to enact laws protecting basic LGBT rights.[15] [16] A 2022 study found that LGBT rights (as measured by ILGA-Europe 's Rainbow Index) were correlated with less HIV/AIDS incidence among gay and bisexual men independently of risky sexual behavior.[17]
The 2023 Equaldex Equality Index ranks the Nordic countries , Chile , Uruguay , Canada , the Benelux countries, Spain , Andorra , and Malta among the best for LGBT rights. The index ranks Nigeria , Yemen , Brunei , Afghanistan , Somalia , Mauritania , Palestine , and Iran among the worst.[18] [better source needed ] Asher & Lyric ranked Canada, Sweden , and the Netherlands as the three safest nations for LGBT people in its 2023 index.[19]
Scope of laws
Laws that affect LGBT people include, but are not limited to, the following:
laws concerning the recognition of same-sex relationships , including same-sex marriage , civil unions , and domestic partnerships
laws concerning LGBT parenting , including adoption by LGBT people
anti-discrimination laws in employment, housing, education, public accommodations
anti-bullying legislation to protect LGBT children at school
hate crime laws imposing enhanced criminal penalties for prejudice-motivated violence against LGBT people
bathroom bills affecting access to sex-segregated facilities by transgender people
laws related to sexual orientation and military service
laws concerning access to assisted reproductive technology
sodomy laws that penalize consensual same-sex sexual activity. These may or may not target homosexuals, males or males and females, or leave some homosexual acts legal.
adultery laws that same-sex couples are subject to
age of consent laws that may impose higher ages for same-sex sexual activity
laws regarding donation of blood, corneas, and other tissues by men who have sex with men
laws concerning access to gender-affirming surgery and hormone replacement therapy
legal recognition and accommodation of the affirmed gender .
History of LGBT-related laws
Ancient India
Ayoni or non-vaginal sex of all types is punishable in the Arthashastra . Homosexual acts are, however, treated as a smaller offence punishable by a fine, while unlawful heterosexual sex carries much harsher punishment. The Dharmsastras , especially the later ones, prescribe against non-vaginal sex like the Vashistha Dharmasutra . The Yājñavalkya Smṛti prescribes fines for such acts including those with other men. Manusmriti prescribes light punishments for such acts.[20] [21] Vanita states that the verses about punishment for a sex between female and a maiden is due to its strong emphasis on a maiden's sexual purity.[22]
Ancient Israel
The ancient Law of Moses (the Torah ) forbids men from lying with men (i.e., from having intercourse ) in Leviticus 18 and gives a story of attempted homosexual rape in Genesis 19 , in the story of Sodom and Gomorrah , after which the cities were soon destroyed with "brimstone and fire, from the Lord"[23] [24] and the death penalty was prescribed to its inhabitants – and to Lot's wife , who was turned into a pillar of salt because she turned back to watch the cities' destruction.[25] [26] In Deuteronomy 22:5, cross-dressing is condemned as "abominable".[27] [28]
Assyria
In Assyrian society, sex crimes were punished identically whether they were homosexual or heterosexual.[29] An individual faced no punishment for penetrating someone of equal social class , a cult prostitute, or with someone whose gender roles were not considered solidly masculine.[29] Such sexual relations were even seen as good fortune , with an Akkadian tablet , the Šumma ālu , reading, "If a man copulates with his equal from the rear, he becomes the leader among his peers and brothers".[30] [31] However, homosexual relationships with fellow soldiers, slaves, royal attendants, or those where a social better was submissive or penetrated , were treated as bad omens .[32] [33]
Middle Assyrian Law Codes dating 1075 BC has a particularly harsh law for homosexuality in the military , which reads: "If a man have intercourse with his brother-in-arms, they shall turn him into a eunuch ."[34] [35] A similar law code reads, "If a seignior lay with his neighbor, when they have prosecuted him (and) convicted him, they shall lie with him (and) turn him into a eunuch". This law code condemns a situation that involves homosexual rape . Any Assyrian male could visit a prostitute or lie with another male, just as long as false rumors or forced sex were not involved with another male.[36]
Ancient Rome
In ancient Rome, the bodies of citizen youths were strictly off-limits, and the Lex Scantinia imposed penalties on those who committed a sex crime (stuprum ) against a freeborn male minor .[37] Acceptable same-sex partners were males excluded from legal protections as citizens: slaves , male prostitutes , and the infames , entertainers or others who might be technically free but whose lifestyles set them outside the law.
A male citizen who willingly performed oral sex or received anal sex was disparaged, but there is only limited evidence of legal penalties against these men.[38] In courtroom and political rhetoric, charges of effeminacy and passive sexual behaviors were directed particularly at "democratic" politicians (populares ) such as Julius Caesar and Mark Antony .[39]
Roman law addressed the rape of a male citizen as early as the 2nd century BC when it was ruled that even a man who was "disreputable and questionable" had the same right as other citizens not to have his body subjected to forced sex.[40] A law probably dating to the dictatorship of Julius Caesar defined rape as forced sex against "boy, woman, or anyone"; the rapist was subject to execution, a rare penalty in Roman law.[41] A male classified as infamis , such as a prostitute or actor, could not as a matter of law be raped, nor could a slave, who was legally classified as property; the slave's owner, however, could prosecute the rapist for property damage.[42]
In the Roman army of the Republic, sex among fellow soldiers violated the decorum against intercourse with citizens and was subject to harsh penalties, including death,[43] as a violation of military discipline .[44] The Greek historian Polybius (2nd century BC) lists deserters , thieves, perjurers , and "...on young men who have abused their persons" as subject to the fustuarium , clubbing to death.[45] Ancient sources are most concerned with the effects of sexual harassment by officers, but the young soldier who brought an accusation against his superior needed to show that he had not willingly taken the passive role or prostituted himself.[46] Soldiers were free to have relations with their male slaves ;[47] the use of a fellow citizen-soldier's body was prohibited, not homosexual behaviors per se.[48] By the late Republic and throughout the Imperial period , there is increasing evidence that men whose lifestyle marked them as "homosexual" in the modern sense served openly.[49]
Although Roman law did not recognize marriage between men, and in general Romans regarded marriage as a heterosexual union with the primary purpose of producing children, in the early Imperial period some male couples were celebrating traditional marriage rites . Juvenal remarks with disapproval that his friends often attended such ceremonies.[50] The emperor Nero had two marriages to men, once as the bride (with a freedman Pythagoras ) and once as the groom. His consort Sporus appeared in public as Nero's wife wearing the regalia that was customary for the Roman empress.[51]
Apart from measures to protect the prerogatives of citizens, the prosecution of homosexuality as a general crime began in the 3rd century of the Christian era when male prostitution was banned by Philip the Arab . By the end of the 4th century, after the Roman Empire had come under Christian rule , passive homosexuality was punishable by burning .[52] "Death by sword" was the punishment for a "man coupling like a woman" under the Theodosian Code .[53] Under Justinian , all same-sex acts, passive or active, no matter who the partners are, were declared contrary to nature and punishable by death.[54]
British Empire
The United Kingdom introduced anti-homosexuality laws throughout its colonies, particularly in the 19th century when the British Empire was at its peak.[55] As of 2018, more than half of the 71 countries that criminalised homosexuality were former British colonies or protectorates.[56]
Netherlands
In 2001, the Netherlands was the first country in the world to legalize same-sex marriage .[57]
Global LGBT rights maps
Note that for simplicity the table below does not distinguish between 'legal' and 'lawful'. An action can only be legal or illegal where a specific law has been passed.
Laws regarding same-sex sexuality by country or territory
Worldwide laws regarding same-sex intercourse, unions and expression
Same-sex intercourse illegal. Penalties: Prison; death not enforced
Death under militias
Prison, with arrests or detention
Prison, not enforced1
Same-sex intercourse legal. Recognition of unions: Extraterritorial marriage2
Limited foreign
Optional certification
None
Restrictions of expression
Restrictions of association with arrest or detention
Rings indicate local or case-by-case application.
1 No imprisonment in the past three years or moratorium on law. 2 Marriage not available locally. Some jurisdictions may perform other types of partnerships.
Decriminalization of same-sex sexual intercourse by country or territory
1791–1850
1850–1945
1946–1989
1990–present
Unknown date of legalization of same-sex intercourse
Same-sex sexual intercourse always legal
Still criminalized
Legal status of same-sex marriage
Marriage open to same-sex couples (rings: individual cases)
Mixed jurisdiction: marriage recognized by the state but not by tribal government for residents who are members of the tribe
Legislation or binding domestic court ruling establishing same-sex marriage, but marriage is not yet provided for
Same-sex marriage recognized with full rights when performed in certain other jurisdictions
Civil unions or domestic partnerships
Limited legal recognition
Local certification without legal force
Limited recognition of marriage performed in certain other jurisdictions (residency rights for spouses)
Country subject to an international court ruling that recognizes same-sex marriage
Other countries where same-sex unions are not legally recognized
Employment discrimination laws by sexual orientation or gender identity by country or territory
Sexual orientation and gender identity: all employment
Sexual orientation with anti–employment discrimination ordinance and gender identity solely in public employment
Sexual orientation: all employment
Gender identity: all employment
Sexual orientation and gender identity: federal public employment and federal contractors
Sexual orientation and gender identity: public employment
Sexual orientation: public employment
No national-level employment laws covering sexual orientation or gender identity
Legal status on conversion therapy for minors on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity by country or territory
Ban on conversion therapy on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity
De facto ban on conversion therapy
Case-by-case bans
Proposed ban on conversion therapy
No ban on conversion therapy
Timeline
Decriminalization of homosexuality timeline
Countries/Territories/States
Never been illegal
18th century
1791: Andorra Kingdom of France (includes Guadeloupe, French Guiana, Martinique, Réunion, San Barthélemy, Saint Martin, and Saint Pierre and Miquelon) Saint-Domingue (Haiti)1793: Monaco 1794: Luxembourg 1795: Belgium 1798: Geneva, Switzerland Ticino, Switzerland Vaud, Switzerland Valais, Switzerland
19th century
20th century
1912: Taiwan 1924: Peru 1933: Denmark (includes Greenland and the Faroe Islands )1932: Poland 1934: Uruguay 1940: Kingdom of Iceland 1942: Switzerland (nationwide)1944: Sweden 1951: Greece Jordan West Bank, Palestine 1956: Thailand 1961: Hungary 1962: Czecho slovakia Illinois, United States 1967: England and Wales, United Kingdom 1968: Bulgaria East Germany 1969: Canada West Germany1971: Austria Connecticut, United States Costa Rica Finland 1972: Colorado, United States Oregon, United States Norway 1973: Delaware, United States Hawaii, United States Malta North Dakota, United States 1974: Massachusetts, United States Ohio, United States 1975: East Timor New Hampshire, United States New Mexico, United States South Australia, Australia 1976: Australian Capital Territory, Australia Bahrain California, United States Indiana, United States Maine, United States Washington, United States West Virginia, United States 1977: Socialist Republic of Croatia Socialist Republic of Montengro Socialist Republic of Slovenia South Dakota, United States Vermont, United States Wyoming, United States 1978: Guam, United States Iowa, United States Nebraska, United States New Jersey, United States 1979: Cuba Spain 1980: American Samoa, United States New York, United States Pennsylvania, United States 1981: Colombia Scotland, United Kingdom Victoria, Australia 1982: Northern Ireland, United Kingdom 1983: Guernsey, United Kingdom Northern Mariana Islands, United States Northern Territory, Australia Portugal Wisconsin, United States 1984: New South Wales, Australia 1985: United States Virgin Islands, United States 1986: New Zealand 1988: Israel 1989: Falkland Islands, United Kingdom Liechtenstein 1990: Jersey, United Kingdom Paraguay Western Australia, Australia 1991: Bahamas Abkhazia British Hong Kong Queensland, Australia South Ossetia Ukraine 1992: Estonia Isle of Man, United Kingdom Kentucky, United States Latvia 1993: District of Columbia, United States Gibraltar, United Kingdom Guinea Bissau Ireland Lithuania Mongolia Nevada, United States Norfolk Island, Australia Russia [b] 1994: Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija Belarus Bermuda, United Kingdom Republic of Serbia 1995: Albania Moldova 1996: Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina Portuguese Macau North Macedonia Romania Tennessee, United States 1997: China Ecuador Montana, United States Tasmania, Australia Venezuela 1998: Cyprus Georgia, United States Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina Rhode Island, United States South Africa Tajikistan 1999: Chile Maryland, United States 2000: Akrotiri and Dhekelia, United Kingdom Azerbaijan Georgia
21st century
2001: Anguilla, United Kingdom Arizona, United States Brčko District, Bosnia and Herzegovina British Virgin Islands, United Kingdom Cayman Islands, United Kingdom Minnesota, United States Montserrat, United Kingdom Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha, United Kingdom Pitcairn Islands, United Kingdom Turks and Caicos Islands, United Kingdom 2002: Arkansas, United States Transnistria 2003: Armenia Tokelau, New Zealand United States (nationwide)2004: Cape Verde 2005: Marshall Islands 2007: Nepal Vanuatu 2008: Nicaragua Panama 2010: Fiji 2012: Lesotho São Tomé and Príncipe 2014: Northern Cyprus Palau 2015: Mozambique 2016: Belize Nauru Seychelles 2018: India Trinidad and Tobago 2019: Botswana 2020: Gabon 2021: Angola Bhutan 2022: Antigua and Barbuda Barbados Singapore Saint Kitts and Nevis 2023: Cook Islands, New Zealand Mauritius 2024: Dominica Namibia
Note that while this template lists several historical countries, such as the Kingdom of France, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, etc., for the sake of clarity, the flags shown are contemporary flags.
When a country has decriminalized, re-criminalized, and decriminalized again (e.g. Albania, Bulgaria, Spain, republics of the Soviet Union) only the later decriminalization date is included. Countries which have decriminalized and since re-criminalized (e.g. Iraq) are excluded.
[c]
Africa
List of countries or territories by LGBT rights in Africa
Northern Africa
Western Africa
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Benin
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country);[68] [94] Age of consent discrepancy[68]
Burkina Faso
Legal, Criminalization pending since 2024 (Law hasn't come into effect yet) [95]
Constitutional ban since 1991
Cape Verde
Legal since 2004 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[68]
Gambia
Illegal since 1888 (as the Gambia Colony and Protectorate ) Penalty: Up to Iife imprisonment.[68] [96] [97]
Forms of gender expression criminalized since 2013[98]
Ghana
Guinea
Illegal since 1988 Penalty: 6 months to 10 years imprisonment.[103]
Guinea-Bissau
Legal since 1993[68] + UN decl. sign.
Ivory Coast
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country); Age of consent discrepancy[68]
Liberia
Illegal since 1976 Penalty: 1 year imprisonment.[68] [104] (repeal disputed)
Mali
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country)[68]
Constitutional ban since 2023[105]
[106]
Mauritania
Illegal since 1983 Penalty: Capital punishment for men, (not enforced); prison and a fine for women.[68] [107]
Niger
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country); Age of consent discrepancy[68]
[106]
Nigeria
Illegal since 1904 (Northern Region only) Illegal since 1916 (Region-wide ) Penalty: Up to 14 years imprisonment. Death in the states of Bauchi , Borno , Gombe , Jigawa , Kaduna , Kano , Katsina , Kebbi , Niger , Sokoto , Yobe , and Zamfara . (not enforced)[68] [108] [97]
Statutory ban since 2013
Forms of gender expression criminalized in Sharia provinces.
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom )
Legal since 2001 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Legal since 2017
Legal since 2017 [109] [110]
Legal since 2017
UK responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination
Senegal
Illegal since 1966 Penalty: 1 to 5 years imprisonment.[68] [111]
Sierra Leone
Male illegal since 1861 (as the Sierra Leone Colony and Protectorate ) Penalty: Up to life imprisonment (Not enforced, repeal disputed). Female always legal + UN decl. sign.[68]
Togo
Illegal since 1980 Penalty: Fine and 3 years imprisonment [68] (repeal proposed)[112]
Central Africa
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Cameroon
Illegal since 1972 Penalty: Fines to 5 years imprisonment.[68] [97] or vigilante execution and torture,[113] (repeal proposed) [114]
Central African Republic
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country)[68] + UN decl. sign.
Constitutional ban since 2016[115]
[106]
Chad
Illegal since 2017 Penalty: Between 3 months and 2 years in prison, with fines of 50,000 to 500,000 FCFA. (Penal Code, Chapter 2, Article 354) [116]
[106]
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country)[68]
Constitutional ban since 2005
Republic of the Congo
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country); Age of consent discrepancy[68]
[106]
Equatorial Guinea
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country)[68]
[106]
Gabon
Legal since 2020[117] ; Age of consent discrepancy, + UN decl. sign.
São Tomé and Príncipe
Legal since 2012 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[118]
Eastern Africa
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Burundi
Illegal since 2009 Penalty: fine, and 3 months to 2 years imprisonment. [68] [119] (repeal disputed)
Constitutional ban since 2005
Djibouti
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country) [68] [120]
[106]
Eritrea
Illegal Penalty: Up to 3 years imprisonment.[68] [121] or vigilate execution[122] Beatings and torture are also tolerated.[123] [124]
Ethiopia
Illegal Penalty: Up to 15 years. [68] (repeal disputed) [125]
Statutory ban since 2009[126]
Kenya
Illegal since 1897 (as the East Africa Protectorate ) Penalty: up to 14 years imprisonment. (repeal proposed) [68] [97] [127]
Constitutional ban since 2010[128]
/ Limited protection following legal process by the authorities.[129]
[130]
Rwanda
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country)[68] + UN decl. sign.
Constitutional ban since 2003
Bans some anti-gay discrimination.[131]
Somalia
Illegal Penalty: Up to 3 years prison. Jubaland Illegal. Penalty: Up to death in Jubaland.[citation needed ]
Somaliland (Disputed territory)
Illegal Penalty: Up to 3 years prison, sometimes death sentences.[132]
South Sudan
Illegal since 1899 (as Anglo-Egyptian Sudan ) Penalty: Up to 10 years imprisonment. (not enforced) [68] [97]
Constitutional ban since 2011[citation needed ]
Forms of gender expression are criminalized.
Tanzania
Illegal since 1864 (only Zanzibar ) Illegal since 1899 Penalty: Up to life imprisonment.[68] [97] Vigilante executions, beatings and torture[133] [134] are also tolerated.
Uganda
Male illegal since 1902 (as Protectorate ) Female illegal since 2000 Penalty: Life imprisonment, Death penalty in some cases, Beatings, torture, or vigilante execution. [135] [136]
Constitutional ban since 2005
Indian Ocean states
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Comoros
Illegal since 1982 Penalty: 5 years imprisonment and fines. (not enforced)[68] [137]
[106]
French Southern and Antarctic Lands (Overseas territory of France )
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the territory)[68]
Civil solidarity pact since 1999[citation needed ]
Legal since 2013
Legal since 2013
France responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination
Under French law
Madagascar
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the country); Age of consent discrepancy[68]
Mauritius
Legal since 2023[138] + UN decl. sign.
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[139] [140]
Mayotte (Overseas region of France )
Legal (No laws against same-sex sexual activity have ever existed in the region)[68]
Civil solidarity pact since 2007
Legal since 2013
Legal since 2013
France responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination
Under French law
Réunion (Overseas region of France )
Legal since 1791[68]
Civil solidarity pact since 1999
Legal since 2013
Legal since 2013
France responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination
Under French law
Seychelles
Legal since 2016[141] + UN decl. sign.
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[68]
Southern Africa
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Angola
Legal since 2021 [142]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[143]
May possibly change gender under the Código do Registro Civil 2015 [144]
Botswana
Legal since 2019 [145]
(Only LGB)
Bans all anti-gay discrimination
Legal gender change recognized as a constitutional right since 2017[146]
Eswatini
Male illegal since the 1880s (not enforced, repeal proposed) Penalty: Unknown Female always legal[68] [97]
Lesotho
Male legal since 2012 Female always legal[68]
May possibly change gender under the National Identity Cards Act 9 of 2011 [147]
Malawi
Illegal since 1891 (as British Central Africa Protectorate )[97] Penalty: Up to 14 years imprisonment, with or without corporal punishment for men up to 5 years imprisonment for women (repeal proposed)[68] [148] [97] [149] [150]
Mozambique
Legal since 2015[151] [152]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[68] [139]
Namibia
Legal since 2024[153]
/ Foreign same-sex marriages recognised[citation needed ] .
/ Foreign same-sex marriages recognised[citation needed ] .
Bans some anti-gay discrimination.[154]
Under the Births, Marriages and Deaths Registration Act 81 of 1963 [155]
South Africa
Male legal since 1998 Female always legal; equal age of consent since 2007 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Limited recognition of unregistered partnerships since 1998; same-sex marriage since 2006
Legal since 2006
Legal since 2002
Since 1998
Constitution bans all anti-gay discrimination
Anti-discrimination laws are interpreted to include gender identity[citation needed ] ; legal gender may be changed after surgical or medical treatment
Zambia
Illegal since 1911 (as part of the British South Africa Company rule of Rhodesia ) Penalty: up to 14 years imprisonment. (repeal proposed)[68] [97]
Zimbabwe
Male illegal since 1891 (as part of the British South Africa Company rule of Rhodesia ) Penalty: up to 14 years imprisonment. (repeal proposed) Female always legal[68] [97]
Constitutional ban since 2013[156]
Americas
List of countries or territories by LGBT rights in the Americas
North America
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Lack of a Presence of Anti-LGBT laws
Bermuda (Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom )
Legal since 1994; equal age of consent since 2019 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Domestic partnerships since 2018[157]
Was legal between November 2018 and March 2022 and between May 2017 and June 2018
Legal since 2015[158]
UK responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[159]
Canada
Legal since 1969; equal age of consent since 1987 + UN decl. sign.[68] [160]
Domestic partnerships in Nova Scotia (2001);[161] Civil unions in Quebec (2002);[162] Adult interdependent relationships in Alberta (2003);[163] Common-law relationships in Manitoba (2004)[164]
Legal in some provinces and territories since 2003, nationwide since 2005 [165]
Legal in some provinces and territories since 1996, nationwide since 2011[166]
Since 1992[167] ; Includes transgender people[168]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination. Ban on conversion therapy since 2022 nationwide
Transgender people can change their gender and name without completion of medical intervention and human rights protections explicitly include gender identity or expression within all of Canada since 2017[169] [170] [171] [172]
[173] [174]
Greenland (Autonomous Territory within the Kingdom of Denmark )
Legal since 1933; equal age of consent since 1977 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships between 1996 and 2016 (Existing partnerships are still recognised.)[175]
Legal since 2016
Stepchild adoption since 2009;[176] joint adoption since 2016[177]
The Kingdom of Denmark responsible for defence
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[68]
Legal gender change and recognition possible without surgery or hormone therapy[178] [179]
Mexico
Legal since 1871 + UN decl. sign.[68]
/ Civil unions in Mexico City (2007), Coahuila (2007),[180] Colima (between 2013 and 2016),[181] Campeche (2013),[182] Jalisco (between 2014 and 2018),[183] Michoacán (2015), Tlaxcala (2017), and Veracruz (2020)
Starting in 2010; nationwide since 2022
/ Legal in Mexico City (2010),[184] Coahuila (2014), Chihuahua (2015), Jalisco (2016), Michoacán (2016), Colima (2016), Morelos (2016), Campeche (2016), Veracruz (2016), Baja California (2017), Querétaro (2017), Chiapas (2017), Puebla (2017), Aguascalientes (2018), San Luis Potosi (2019), Hidalgo (2019), Yucatán (2021), Nayarit (2022), Quintana Roo (2022), Baja California Sur (2022), Zacatecas (2023), Tabasco (2024), Durango, Tamaulipas, and Nuevo León (the latter three never had adoption bans)[185] [186]
(ambiguous)
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[187] Pathologization or attempted treatment of sexual orientation by mental health professionals illegal in Mexico City (2020), México (2020), Baja California Sur (2020), Colima (2021), Tlaxcala (2021), Oaxaca (2021), Yucatán (2021), Zacatecas (2021), Baja California (2022), Hidalgo (2022), Jalisco (2022), Puebla (2022), Sonora (2022), Nuevo León (2022), Querétaro (2023), Sinaloa (2023), Quintana Roo (2023), Morelos (2023), Guerrero (2024), and nationwide (2024).
/ Transgender persons can change their legal gender and name in Mexico City (2008),[188] Michoacán (2017), Nayarit (2017), Coahuila (2018), Hidalgo (2019), San Luis Potosí (2019), Colima (2019), Baja California (2019), Oaxaca (2019), Tlaxcala (2019), Chihuahua (2019), Sonora (2020), Jalisco (2020), Quintana Roo (2020), Puebla (2021), Baja California Sur (2021), México (2021), Morelos (2021), Sinaloa (2022), Zacatecas (2022), Durango (2023), and Yucatán (2024) [189]
Saint Pierre and Miquelon (Overseas collectivity of France )
Legal since 1791 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil solidarity pact since 1999[190]
Legal since 2013[191]
Legal since 2013[192]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[87]
Under French law[193]
United States
Legal in some states since 1962, nationwide since 2003 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Domestic partnerships in California (1999), the District of Columbia (2002), Maine (2004), Washington (2007), Maryland (2008), Oregon (2008), Nevada (2009) and Wisconsin (2009).Civil unions in Vermont (2000), Connecticut (2005), New Jersey (2007), New Hampshire (2008), Illinois (2011), Rhode Island (2011), Delaware (2012), Hawaii (2012) and Colorado (2013).
Legal in some states since 2004, nationwide since 2015
Legal in some states since 1993, nationwide since 2016
/ Lesbians, gays, and bisexuals have been allowed to serve openly in the U.S. military since 2011, following the repeal of the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy. Transgender people have been allowed to serve openly since 2021.[194] "Transvestites" are currently banned from the military since 2012 .[195] Most openly Intersex people may be banned from the military under the Armed Forces ban of "hermaphrodites ".[195]
/ Employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is prohibited nationwide since 2020 . More extensive protections exist in 23 states , DC, and some municipalities.Conversion therapy for minors is banned in 22 states, DC, and some municipalities . Sexual orientation is covered by the federal hate crime law since 2009 .
/ Since April 11, 2022 by legal self determination - gender X became available and recognized formally on US passports .[196] Gender change is legal on birth certificates (under varying conditions by state), in 48 states + DC . Nonbinary gender markers are available, under varying circumstances, in 25 states + DC . Employment discrimination on the basis of gender identity is prohibited nationwide since 2020 . More extensive protections exist in 22 states , DC, and some municipalities. Gender identity is covered by the federal hate crime law since 2009 .
Federally / Status varies state to state
Central America
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Lack of a Presence of Anti-LGBT laws
Belize
Legal since 2016[197]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[198] [199] [200]
[201]
Costa Rica
Legal since 1971 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Unregistered cohabitation since 2014[202] [203]
Legal since 2020
Legal since 2020[204]
Has no military
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[68]
/ Transgender persons can change their legal name without surgeries or judicial permission since 2018. Legal gender cannot be changed. Sex indicator removed from all ID cards issued since May 2018[205] [206] [207] One-time sex change allowed for passports. [208]
[173] [174]
El Salvador
Legal since 1822 + UN decl. sign.[68]
[209] [210]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[209]
[211] Bans discrimination based on gender identity.
Guatemala
Legal since 1871 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Pending
Bans some anti-gay discrimination
[212]
Honduras
Legal since 1899 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Constitutional ban on de facto unions since 2005
Constitutional ban since 2005;[213] [214] court decision pending
Constitutional ban since 2005
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[215]
Nicaragua
Legal since 2008 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[68]
Panama
Legal since 2008 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Court decision pending
Court decision pending
Court decision pending
Has no military
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[216] [217]
Transgender persons can change their legal gender and name after completion of medical intervention since 2006[218] [219]
/
Caribbean
South America
Asia
List of countries or territories by LGBT rights in Asia
North Asia
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military?
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Russia
Yes Fully legal since 1993[334] [68] No Illegal de facto in Chechnya , where homosexuals are abducted and sent to concentration camps based on their perceived sexual orientation.
No
No Constitutional ban since 2020[335]
No
Yes [336]
No
No Gender change has not been legal since 2023[337]
Central Asia
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military?
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Kazakhstan
Yes Legal since 1998[68]
No
No
No
Yes Since 2022[338]
No
Yes [339]
Kyrgyzstan
Yes Legal since 1998[68]
No
No Constitutional ban since 2016[340]
No
Unknown
No
Yes Requires sex reassignment surgery[341] [339]
Tajikistan
Yes Legal since 1998[68]
No
No
No
Unknown
No
Yes Requires sex reassignment surgery[342] [339]
Turkmenistan
No Illegal for Males since 1927 Penalty: up to 2 years imprisonment.[343]
No
No
No
No
No
No
Uzbekistan
No Illegal for Males since 1926 Penalty: up to 3 years imprisonment.[343]
No
No
No
No
No
No
West Asia
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military?
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Abkhazia (Disputed territory)
Yes Legal
No
No
No
Unknown
No
Unknown
Akrotiri and Dhekelia (Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom )
Yes Legal since 2000 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Yes Civil partnerships since 2005
Yes Legal since 2014
Unknown
Yes UK responsible for defence
Yes Bans some anti-gay discrimination[344]
Unknown
Armenia
Yes Legal since 2003 + UN decl. sign.[68]
No
No Constitutional ban since 2015[345] [346]
No LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples.
No [347]
No
No
Azerbaijan
Yes Legal since 2000[68]
No
No
No
No
No
No
Bahrain
Yes Legal since 1976[68]
No
No
No
No
No
Yes Transgender people allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery .[348]
Cyprus
Yes Legal since 1998 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Yes Civil cohabitation since 2015[349]
No
No
Yes [350]
Yes Bans some anti-gay discrimination[351]
Yes Forbids some discrimination based on gender identity.[352] No Gender change is not legal.
Egypt
Yes / No Ambiguous. Male de jure legal, but de facto illegal since 2000 Penalty: Up to 17 years imprisonment with or without hard labour and with or without fines under broadly-written morality laws.[68] [353]
No
No
No
No
No
No
Georgia
Yes Legal since 2000 + UN decl. sign.[68]
No
No Constitutional ban since 2018
No
Unknown
Yes Bans all anti-gay discrimination[354]
Yes Requires sterilization and sex reassignment surgery for change[355]
Iran
No Illegal Penalty: 74 lashes for immature men and death penalty for mature men (although there are documented cases of minors executed because of their sexual orientation)[356] . For women, 100 lashes for women of mature sound mind and if consenting. Death penalty offense after fourth conviction.[68]
No
No
No
No
No
Yes Legal gender recognition legal if accompanied by a medical intervention [357]
Iraq
No Re-criminalized in 2024.[358] Penalty: Prison sentence between 10 and 15 years.
No
No
No
No
No
No
Israel
Yes Legal since 1963 (de facto), 1988 (de jure)[359] + UN decl. sign.[68] [360]
Yes Unregistered cohabitation since 1994.
No / Yes Foreign same-sex marriages are recognized and recorded in the population registry
No Permitted by law since 2008,[361] but in practice not possible in nearly every case[362]
Yes Since 1993; Includes transgender people[363]
Yes Bans all anti-gay discrimination[364] [365] [366]
Yes Almost full recognition of gender's ID without a surgery or medical intervention (Excluding changing gender and name in birth certificate) ;[367] equal employment opportunity law bars discrimination based on gender identity[368] [369] [370]
Jordan
Yes Legal[68]
No
No
No
Unknown
No
Yes Allowed since 2014[371]
Kuwait
No Male illegalPenalty: Fines or up to 6-year prison sentence. Yes Female always legal[68] [372]
No
No
No
No
No
No
Lebanon
Yes / No Ambiguous. Illegal under Article 534 of the Penal Code. Some judges have ruled not to prosecute individuals based on the law, however, this has not been settled by the Supreme Court and thus homosexuality is still illegal.[373] However, a 2017 court ruling claims that it is legal, but the law against it is still in place. Penalty: Up to 1 year imprisonment (unenforced).
No
No
No
No
No
Yes Legal gender change allowed, but sex reassignment surgery required[374]
Northern Cyprus (Disputed territory)
Yes Legal since 2014[375] [376] [68]
No
No
No
No
Yes Bans all anti-gay discrimination[375] [376]
Yes Legal, requires surgery for change[377]
Oman
No Illegal Penalty: Fines and prison sentence up to 3 years (only enforced when dealing with "public scandal").[68]
No
No
No
No
No
No Laws against forms of gender expression.
Palestine
West Bank: Yes Legal[68] Gaza: No consensus on legal applicability of British 1936 Sexual offences provisions to homosexual conduct[378] [379] [380] [381]
West Bank: No Gaza: No
No
No
Unknown
No
No
Qatar
No Illegal Penalty: Fines, up to 7 years imprisonment[68] Death penalty for Muslims.
No
No
No
No
No
No
Saudi Arabia
[68]
No
No
No
No
No
No Laws against forms of gender expression.
South Ossetia (Disputed territory)
Yes Legal
No
No
No
Unknown
No
Unknown
Syria
No Illegal Penalty: Up to 3 years imprisonment (Law de facto suspended)[385] [68]
No
No
No
No
No
Turkey
Yes Legal since 1858[68]
No
No
No LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples.
No
No
Yes Requires sterilisation and sex reassignment surgery for change[386]
United Arab Emirates
No Illegal (unenforced): Prosecution only on complaint of husband or (male) legal guardian[387] [388] Penalty: Max – no upper limit, sentence at courts' discretion Min. – 6 months' imprisonment[387] [389]
No
No
No
No
No
No Sex reassignment surgery severely restricted to limited circumstances (mainly physical intersex traits), highly regulated by the state.[390] [391] Laws used against forms of gender expression.[392]
Yemen
No Illegal (codified in 1994) Penalty: Unmarried men punished with 100 lashes of the whip or a maximum of one year of imprisonment, stoning for adultery is not enforced. Women punished up to three years of imprisonment.[68]
No
No
No
No
No
No
South Asia
East Asia
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of relationships
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military?
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
China
Yes Legal since 1997[68]
No / Yes "Legal guardianship" since 2017
No
No
Yes can serve No open displays [410] [411]
No
Yes / No Transgender people allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery . However, it is difficult to change the gender information of educational attainments and academic degrees for lack of legal procedures, even after sex reassignment surgery [412] , which has caused discrimination against well-educated trans women[413] .
Hong Kong
Yes Legal since 1991[68]
No / Yes Same-sex marriages registered overseas for government benefits and taxation, and limited recognition of local cohabiting partners
No
No LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[414]
The central government of China is responsible for the defense of Hong Kong.[415]
Yes Bans some anti-gay discrimination (government discrimination only)
Yes Surgery not required since 2023 in accordance to a court ruling[416]
Japan
Yes Legal since 1882 + UN decl. sign.[68]
No * Symbolic recognition in some jurisdictions.
No Proposed in 2023[417]
No
Yes The Japan Self-Defense Forces allow gay people to enlist.[418]
No nationwide protections Yes some cities ban some anti-gay discrimination[68]
Yes Transgender people allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery
Macau
Yes Legal since 1996
No
No
No
The central government of China is responsible for the defence of Macau.
Yes Bans some anti-gay discrimination
Unknown
Mongolia
Yes Legal since 1993 + UN decl. sign.[68]
No
No Constitutional ban since 1992
No
Unknown
Yes Bans some anti-gay discrimination
Yes Transgender people allowed to change legal gender but only after sex reassignment surgery
North Korea
Yes / No Ambiguous, punishable through Articles 193 and 262 regarding obscenity and decency laws.[dubious – discuss ] Penalty: Unknown
No
No
No
Yes can serve with 10-year celibacy required for all soldiers.[419] No open displays of LGBT attitudes.
No
No
South Korea
Yes Legal + UN decl. sign.[68]
No
No Proposed in 2023[420]
No
No
Yes / No Protection from discrimination varies by jurisdiction in some areas, including Seoul
Yes Transgender people allowed to change legal gender but usually requires sex reassignment surgery
Taiwan
Yes Legal[421]
[422]
Legal since 2019[423] [424] [425]
Yes Stepchild adoption since 2019 Yes Joint adoption legal since 2023[426]
Yes
Yes Constitutionally bans all anti-gay discrimination from government[427] ; several laws banning anti-gay discrimination regarding education and employment.[428] [429]
Yes Transgender people allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery.[d]
Southeast Asia
LGBT rights in
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of relationships
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military?
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Aceh (autonomous territory of Indonesia )
No Illegal Penalty: 100 strokes of the cane or 8 years in prison[431]
No
No
No LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples
No The central government of Indonesia is responsible for the defense of Aceh.
Yes Follows the law of the central Indonesian government.
Yes Follows the law of the central Indonesian government.
Brunei
No Illegal since 1908 Penalty: Death by stoning (in abeyance), 1 year imprisonment and 100 lashes for men. Caning and 10 years prison for women.[432]
No
No
No
No
No
Laws prohibit forms of gender expression.
Cambodia
Yes Legal[68]
No / Yes Partnerships recognized in certain cities
No Constitutional ban since 1993
No
Unknown
No
No [433]
East Timor
Yes Legal since 1975 + UN decl. sign.[68]
No
No
Yes LGBT individuals may adopt but same-sex couples can not adopt
Unknown
Yes Bans some anti gay discrimination, Hate crime protections since 2009.[434]
Unknown
Indonesia
Yes Legal (except in Aceh)[68] [435]
No
No
No LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples
No Not explicitly prohibited by Law (de jure), Illegal (de facto)
Yes Limited protection following legal process by the authorities.[436]
Yes Transgender people allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery .
Laos
Yes Legal[68]
No
No
No
Unknown
No
Unknown
Malaysia
No Illegal since 1871 Penalty: fines, prison sentence (2–20 years), or whippings.[68] [437]
No
No
No LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples
No
No
No Generally impossible to change gender. However, a 2016 court ruling recognizes gender changes as fundamental constitutional rights[438] Forms of gender expression are criminalized.
Myanmar
No Illegal since 1886 Penalty: Up to 20 years in prison (Occasionally enforced).[68] [439]
No
No
No
No
No
No
Philippines
Yes Legal + UN decl. sign.[440] [68] [441] [442] [e]
No (Pending) [440]
No (Pending) [443]
No LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[444] [443]
Yes Since 2009
Yes / No Bans some anti-gay discrimination in certain cities and provinces,[445] including the City of Manila,[446] Cebu City,[447] Quezon City,[448] and Davao City;[449] Nationwide anti-bullying law for basic education students.[450]
No Generally impossible to change legal gender. However in Cagandahan vs Philippines , allowed an intersex man to change his legal gender from female to male.
Singapore
Yes Legal since 2022
No
No
Ambiguous, a gay Singaporean man with a male partner in 2018 won an appeal in court to adopt a child that he fathered through a surrogate.[451]
Yes
Yes Protections against anti-gay discrimination, harassment and violence[452]
Yes Transgender people allowed to change legal gender, but only after sex reassignment surgery
Thailand
Yes Legal since 1956 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Yes Pending for 2024[453]
Yes Pending for 2024[453] [454] [455]
Yes Pending for 2024[453]
Yes Since 2005 [456]
Yes Bans all anti-gay discrimination
No [454] [457]
Yes Anti-discrimination protections for gender expression.[437]
Vietnam
Yes Legal[68] + UN decl. sign.[68]
No
No
No LGBT individuals may adopt, not same-sex couples[458]
Yes Irrespective of one's sexual orientation
Yes Bans some anti-gay discrimination
Yes Gender changes recognized and officially practised since 2017[459] [460]
Europe
List of countries or territories by LGBT rights in Europe
European Union
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
European Union
Legal in all 27 member states[461]
/ Recognized in 25/27 member states
/ Legal in 16/27 member states
/ Stepchild adoption legal in 20/27 member states; joint adoption legal in 17/27 member states
Legal in all member states
Membership requires a state to ban discrimination based on person's sexual orientation in employment. 4/27 states ban some anti-gay discrimination. 23/27 states ban all anti-gay discrimination
/ Legal in 25/27 member states[462]
Central Europe
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Lack of a Presence of Anti-LGBT laws
Austria
Legal since 1971; equal age of consent since 2002[68] + UN decl. sign.
Registered partnerships since 2010[463]
Legal since 2019[464]
Stepchild adoption since 2013; joint adoption since 2016[465] [466] [467]
Includes transgender people[468]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Transgender people allowed to change gender without undergoing surgery[355]
[173] [174]
Czech Republic
Legal since 1962 (As part of Czechoslovakia ); equal age of consent since 1990 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships since 2006[469]
Effective from January 1, 2025 “biological and partial step-child” adoption for same-sex couples, not full joint adoption.
Includes transgender people[470]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Legal recognition after sex reassignment surgery (with mandatory sterilisation)[471]
[173] [174]
Germany
Legal in East Germany since 1968 Legal in West Germany since 1969; equal age of consent since 1988 in East Germany and since 1994 in unified Germany + UN decl. sign.[68] [472]
Registered life partnerships from 2001 to 2017 (existing partnerships and new foreign partnerships still recognised)[473] [474]
Legal since 2017[475]
Stepchild adoption since 2005; successive adoption since 2013; joint adoption legal since 2017[475]
Includes transgender people[476]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[477]
Effective from November 1, 2024 self-determination of gender changes.
[173] [174]
Hungary
Legal since 1962; equal age of consent since 2002 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships since 2009[478]
Constitutional ban since 2012[479] [480] [481] [482]
Constitutional ban since 2020[483] [480]
[citation needed ]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Forbids discrimination based on gender identity
Transgender people are not allowed to change gender since 2020.[484]
[173] [174]
Liechtenstein
Legal since 1989; equal age of consent since 2001 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships since 2011[485]
Legal since January 1, 2025 [486] [487] [488] [489] [490] [491]
Stepchild adoption since 2022; joint adoption since 2023[492] [493]
Has no military
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Gender change is not legal[471]
[173] [174]
Poland
Legal since 1932 + UN decl. sign.[68]
/ Unregistered cohabitation since 2012; registered partnership proposed 2019
Constitutional ban since 1997[494] (Article 18 of the Constitution is generally interpreted as limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples[495] [496] [497] [498] [499] [500] )[f]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[502]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[351]
Transgender people allowed to change gender but require undergoing medical treatment such as HRT or surgery. No provisions for nonbinary people.
[173] [174]
Slovakia
Legal since 1962 (As part of Czechoslovakia ); equal age of consent since 1990 + UN decl. sign.[68]
/ some limited rights for unregistered cohabiting same-sex couples since 2018; Limited residency rights for married same-sex couples since 2018 (Proposed)
Constitutional ban since 2014
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[503]
[citation needed ]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[504] [505]
/ Allowed to change legal gender in theory. However because of lack of care and refusal by the state, de facto almost impossible since 2022. See LGBT rights in Slovakia § Gender identity and expression
[173] [174]
Slovenia
Legal since 1977 (As part of Yugoslavia ); equal age of consent since 1990 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered cohabitation since 2006[506] ; Registered partnerships since 2017[507]
Legal since 2022[508]
Stepchild adoption since 2011; joint adoption since 2022[509]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Gender change is legal[510]
[173] [174]
Switzerland
Legal nationwide since 1942 Legal in the cantons of Geneva (as part of France ), Ticino , Valais , and Vaud since 1798; equal age of consent since 1990 + UN decl. sign.[68] [511]
Registered partnerships in Geneva (2001),[512] Zürich (2003),[513] Neuchâtel (2004)[514] and Fribourg (2005)[514] Nationwide since 2007[515]
Legal since 2022[118]
Stepchild adoption since 2018; joint adoption since 2022[118] [516]
Includes transgender people[517]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination [518]
Gender change is legal on simple declaration (self-determination +16 yo); surgery/sterilisation not required. [519]
[173] [174]
Eastern Europe
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Lack of a Presence of Anti-LGBT laws
Abkhazia (Disputed territory)
Legal after 1991
Armenia
Legal since 2003 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Constitutional ban since 2015[520] [521]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples.
[522]
Azerbaijan
Legal since 2000[68]
Belarus
Legal since 1994[68]
Constitutional ban since 1994[523]
/ Banned from military service during peacetime, but during wartime homosexuals are permitted to enlist as partially able[524]
/ (Highly bureaucratic, lengthy two-stage process: deciding body meets only twice a year; permission for medical or surgical interventions only at the second stage. Flaw in passport conversion whereby passport number may reveal former designation of sex to agencies.)[525]
Georgia
Legal since 2000 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Constitutional ban since 2018
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[526]
Requires sterilisation and surgery for change[471]
Kazakhstan
Legal since 1998[68]
[527]
Requires sex reassignment surgery, sterilization, hormone therapy and medical examinations[citation needed ]
Moldova
Legal since 1995 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Constitutional ban since 1994[528]
[citation needed ]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination
No longer requires sterilisation or surgery for change since 2017[471]
Russia
Male legal since 1993 Female always legal[334] [68] Illegal in practice in Chechnya , where homosexuals are abducted and sent to concentration camps based on their perceived sexual orientation.
Constitutional ban since 2020[335]
Gender change has not been legal since 2023[529]
South Ossetia (Disputed territory)
Legal after 1991
Transnistria (Disputed territory)
Legal since 2002[530]
Ukraine
Legal since 1991 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Constitutional ban since 1996[531]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[532]
[533] [534]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[535]
No longer requires sterilisation or surgery for change since 2016
/[173] [174]
Northern Europe
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Lack of a Presence of Anti-LGBT laws
Denmark
Legal since 1933; equal age of consent since 1973 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships from 1989 to 2012 (existing partnerships are still recognised)[536]
Legal since 2012[537] [538]
Stepchild adoption since 1999; joint adoption since 2010[539] [540]
Includes transgender people[541]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Legal gender change and recognition possible without surgery or hormone therapy[542]
[173] [174]
Estonia
Legal since 1992 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Cohabitation agreement since 2016[543]
Legal since 2024[544]
Stepchild adoption since 2016; joint adoption since 2024[545]
[citation needed ] Includes transgender people[546]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Gender reassignment legal; surgery not required[471]
Faroe Islands (Autonomous Territory within the Kingdom of Denmark )
Legal since 1933; equal age of consent since 1977 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Legal since 2017[547] [548]
Legal since 2017
The Kingdom of Denmark responsible for defence
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[549] [550]
[551]
Finland (includes Åland )
Legal since 1971; equal age of consent since 1999 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships from 2002 to 2017 (existing partnerships are still recognised)[552]
Legal since 2017[553]
Stepchild adoption since 2009; joint adoption since 2017
Includes transgender people[554]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Since 2023, by way of self-determination.[555]
Iceland
Legal since 1940; equal age of consent since 1992 (As part of Denmark ) + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered cohabitation since 2006;[556] Registered partnerships from 1996 to 2010 (existing partnerships are still recognised)[557]
Legal since 2010[558] [559]
Legal since 2006[560] [561]
No standing army
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Documents can be amended to the recognised gender, sterilisation not required[562] [471]
Latvia
Legal since 1992 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships since 2024[563] [564]
Constitutional ban since 2006[565]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples, incl. stepchild adoption[566]
[567]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[568]
Legal change allowed[569] but requires "full" transition and doctor's or court's approval.[570] Sterilization required.[571]
Lithuania
Legal since 1993 + UN decl. sign.[68]
/ Limited residency rights for married same-sex couples since 2018; Cohabitation agreement pending [572] Civil unions proposed.
Constitutional ban since 1992[573]
Only married couples can adopt[574]
Since 2015[575]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Effective from 2/2/2022, gender change on legal documents permitted without surgery and no non-binary option available.[576] [577]
Norway
Legal since 1972 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships from 1993 to 2009 (existing partnerships are still recognised)[578]
Legal since 2009[579] [580]
Stepchild adoption since 2002; joint adoption since 2009[581] [582]
Includes transgender people[583]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[584]
All documents can be amended to the recognised gender[355]
Sweden
Legal since 1944; equal age of consent since 1972 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships from 1995 to 2009 (existing partnerships are still recognised)[585]
Legal since 2009[586]
Legal since 2003[587] [588]
[589] Includes transgender people[590]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
/ First country within the world in 1972 to allow gender reassignment procedures for individuals. Effective from July 1, 2025 by self-determination for individuals to change gender.
Southern Europe
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGBT people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Lack of a Presence of Anti-LGBT laws
Akrotiri and Dhekelia (Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom )
Legal since 2000; equal age of consent since 2003 + UN decl. sign.[68] [591] [592]
Since 2005, for members of the British Armed Forces[593]
Since 2014, for members of the British Armed Forces[594]
UK responsible for defence
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[595]
Albania
Legal since 1995 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
No legal recognition[471]
Andorra
Legal since 1791 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Stable unions since 2005[596] ; Civil unions from 2014–2023, replaced by civil marriage[597]
Legal since 2023
Legal since 2014[598] [597] [599]
Has no military
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Since 2023, without SRS and sterilization - but with a mandatory 2-year waiting period.[600]
[173] [174]
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Legal since 1996 in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina , in Republika Srpska since 1998, and in Brčko District since 2003 + UN decl. sign.[68]
[citation needed ]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Requires surgery for change[601]
Bulgaria
Legal since 1968; equal age of consent since 2002 + UN decl. sign.[68]
/ Limited residency rights for married same-sex couples since 2018
Constitutional ban since 1991[602]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[603]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Forbids discrimination based on gender identity.[604] [605]
Transgender people are not allowed to change gender since 2017.[606] [607]
Croatia
Legal since 1977 (As part of Yugoslavia ); equal age of consent since 1998 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Unregistered cohabitation since 2003 [608] Life partnerships since 2014[609]
Constitutional ban since 2013 [610]
Legal since 2022[611]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351] [612]
Act on the elimination of discrimination bans all discrimination based on both gender identity and gender expression. Gender change is regulated by special policy issued by Ministry of Health.[613]
/
Cyprus
Legal since 1998; equal age of consent since 2002 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil cohabitation since 2015[349]
[350]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[351]
Forbids some discrimination based on gender identity.[352] Gender change legal.
/
Gibraltar ; equal age of consent since 2012 (Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom )
Legal since 1993 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil partnerships since 2014[614]
Legal since 2016[615]
Legal since 2014
UK responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[616]
Forbids discrimination on the grounds of gender reassignment[616]
Gender change is not legal
Greece
Legal since 1951; equal age of consent since 2015 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Cohabitation agreements since 2015[617]
Legal since 2024[618]
Legal since 2024
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Under the Legal Gender Recognition Act 2017 [619] [620]
Italy
Legal since 1890 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil unions since 2016[621]
In 2018 the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriages performed abroad must be registered as civil unions. (Proposed) [622]
/ Stepchild adoption admitted by the Court of Cassation since 2016[623] [624]
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[351]
Legal recognition and documents can be amended to the recognised gender, sterilisation not required[625] [626]
Kosovo (Disputed territory)
Legal since 1994 (as part of Yugoslavia ); equal age of consent since 2004[68]
[627]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[628] [629]
[citation needed ]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[630]
Forbids discrimination based on gender identity.
No legal recognition[471]
Malta
Legal since 1973 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil unions since 2014[631]
Legal since 2017
Legal since 2014
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351] Pathologization or attempted treatment of sexual orientation by mental health professionals illegal since 2016
Transgender people allowed to change gender; surgery not required since 2015[632]
Montenegro
Legal since 1977 (As part of Yugoslavia ) + UN decl. sign.[68]
Life partnership from July 2021[633]
Constitutional ban since 2007 (Court decision pending)[634] [635]
[citation needed ]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Requires sterilisation and surgery for change[355] [471]
/
North Macedonia
Legal since 1996 + UN decl. sign.[68]
(Proposed)
[citation needed ]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Forbids discrimination based on gender identity.
Gender change is legally recognized since 2021
/
Northern Cyprus (Disputed territory)
Legal since 2014[375] [376] [68]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[375] [376]
Legal, requires surgery for change[377]
Portugal
Legal since 1983; equal age of consent since 2007 + UN decl. sign.[68]
De facto unions since 2001 [636] [637]
Legal since 2010[638]
Legal since 2016[639] [640] [641]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
All documents can be amended to the recognised gender since 2011[642]
Romania
Legal since 1996; equal age of consent since 2002 + UN decl. sign.[68]
/ Limited residency rights for married same-sex couples since 2018;[643]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples[644]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Legal recognition after sex reassignment surgery (sterilisation mandatory)[471]
San Marino
Legal since 1865 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil unions since 2019
/ Stepchild adoption legal since 2019
Bans all anti-gay discrimination
No legal recognition[355]
Serbia
Legal from 1858, when nominally a vassal of the Ottoman Empire to 1860,[645] and again since 1994 (As part of Yugoslavia ); equal age of consent since 2006 + UN decl. sign.[68]
(Proposed)
Constitutional ban since 2006[646]
LGBT individuals may adopt, but not same-sex couples
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Legal after 1 year of hormone therapy, surgery no longer required since 2019[647]
Spain
Legal since 1979 + UN decl. sign.[68]
De facto unions in Catalonia (1998),[648] Aragon (1999),[648] Navarre (2000),[648] Castile-La Mancha (2000),[648] Valencia (2001),[649] the Balearic Islands (2001),[650] Madrid (2001),[648] Asturias (2002),[651] Castile and León (2002),[652] Andalusia (2002),[648] the Canary Islands (2003),[648] Extremadura (2003),[648] Basque Country (2003),[648] Cantabria (2005),[653] Galicia (2008)[654] La Rioja (2010),[655] and Murcia (2018),[656] [657] and in both autonomous cities; Ceuta (1998)[658] and Melilla (2008).[659]
Legal since 2005[660]
Legal since 2005[661] [662]
Includes transgender people[663]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351] Pathologization or attempted treatment of sexual orientation by mental health professionals illegal nationwide since 2023.[664]
Since 2023, by way of self-determination[665]
Turkey
Legal since 1858[68]
Legal since 1988, requires sterilisation and surgery for change[666]
Vatican City
Legal since 1890 (As part of Italy )[68]
Has no military
Western Europe
LGBT rights in:
Same-sex sexual activity
Recognition of same-sex unions
Same-sex marriage
Adoption by same-sex couples
LGB people allowed to serve openly in military
Anti-discrimination laws concerning sexual orientation
Laws concerning gender identity/expression
Lack of a Presence of Anti-LGBT laws
Belgium
Legal nationwide since 1795; equal age of consent since 1985 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Legal cohabitation since 2000[667]
Legal since 2003[668] [669] [670]
Legal since 2006[671] [672]
Includes transgender people[673]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Since 2018, sex changes do not require sterilisation and surgery[674]
[173] [174]
France
Legal nationwide since 1791 Legal in Savoy since 1792; equal age of consent since 1982 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil solidarity pact since 1999[675]
Legal since 2013[676]
Legal since 2013[677]
Includes transgender people[678]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[351]
Since 2017, sex changes no longer requires sterilisation and surgery[679]
Guernsey (Crown Dependency of the United Kingdom )
Legal since 1983; equal age of consent since 2012 + UN decl. sign.[680] [681] [68]
Civil partnerships performed in the UK abroad recognised for succession purposes in inheritance and other matters respecting interests in property since 2012[682] [683] Legal cohabitation since 2017[684]
Legal since 2017 in Guernsey, since 2018 in Alderney, and since 2020 in Sark[685] [686]
Legal since 2017[687]
UK responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[688] [689]
Legal gender changes since 2007[690] [691]
Ireland
Male legal since 1993 Female always legal + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil partnerships from 2011 to 2015 (existing partnerships are still recognised)[692]
Legal since 2015 after a constitutional referendum [693]
Legal since 2017[694] [695] [696] [697] [698] [699]
Includes transgender people[700]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[701] [702] [703]
Under the Gender Recognition Act 2015 , by self-declaration.[704]
Isle of Man ; equal age of consent since 2006 (Crown Dependency of the United Kingdom )
Legal since 1992 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil partnerships since 2011[705]
Legal since 2016[706]
Legal since 2011
UK responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[707]
Transgender people are allowed to change their legal gender and to have their new gender recognised as a result of the Gender Recognition Act 2009 (c.11) [708] [709]
Jersey ; equal age of consent since 2006 (Crown Dependency of the United Kingdom )
Legal since 1990 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil partnerships since 2012[710]
Legal since 2018[711] [712]
Legal since 2012
UK responsible for defence
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[713]
Under the Gender Recognition (Jersey) Law 2010 [714]
Luxembourg
Legal since 1795; equal age of consent since 1992 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnerships since 2004[715]
Legal since 2015[716] [717]
Legal since 2015[718]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[719]
No divorce, sterilization and/or surgery legally required since September 2018 for change of gender[720] [471]
Monaco
Legal since 1793 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Cohabitation agreements since 2020
(Proposed)
France responsible for defence
Bans some anti-gay discrimination[68]
Netherlands
Legal since 1811; equal age of consent since 1971 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Registered partnership since 1998[721]
Legal since 2001[722]
Legal since 2001[723] [724]
Includes transgender people[725]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[726]
Since 2014, sex changes do not require sterilisation and surgery[727] [728]
United Kingdom
Female always legal. Male legal in England and Wales since 1967, in Scotland since 1981, and in Northern Ireland since 1982; equal age of consent since 2001 + UN decl. sign.[68]
Civil partnerships since 2005[729]
Legal in England, Wales, and Scotland since 2014, and Northern Ireland since 2020[730] [730]
Legal in England and Wales since 2005, in Scotland since 2009 and Northern Ireland since 2013[731] [732] [733]
Since 2000; Includes transgender people[734]
Bans all anti-gay discrimination[735] [68] [736]
Under the Gender Recognition Act 2004
Oceania
List of countries or territories by LGBT rights in Oceania
Australasia
Melanesia
Micronesia
Polynesia
See also
Notes
^ Legal nationwide, except in the province of Aceh
^ De facto illegal in Chechnya
^ A country in this list is to be presumed to have equalized the age of consent at the same time as it decriminalized homosexual acts, unless otherwise noted
^ In Taiwan, gender change is not explicitly stated in any law; instead it is permitted by an executive order published by the Ministry of the Interior , which dictates that sex reassignment surgeries are required before gender change. In 2021 a judgement by the Taipei High Administrative Court[430] ruled that the executive order above was unconstitutional and therefore the defendant (district household registration office) must allow the plaintiff to change their gender. The judgement was finalized since the defendant did not appeal. However, since rulings in Taiwan are generally not precedential, said judgement only applies to the plaintiff and does not bind other cases nor the executive branch.
^ Except for the settlements Marawi and M'lang .
^ In January 2019, a lower administrative court in Warsaw ruled that the language in Article 18 of the Constitution does not explicitly ban same-sex marriage.[501]
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^ Judgment of the Supreme Court of 7 July 2004, II KK 176/04 , W dotychczasowym orzecznictwie Sądu Najwyższego, wypracowanym i ugruntowanym zarówno w okresie obowiązywania poprzedniego, jak i obecnego Kodeksu postępowania karnego, a także w doktrynie (por. wypowiedzi W. Woltera, A. Zolla, A. Wąska), pojęcie "wspólne pożycie" odnoszone jest wyłącznie do konkubinatu, a w szczególności do związku osób o różnej płci, odpowiadającego od strony faktycznej stosunkowi małżeństwa (którym w myśl art. 18 Konstytucji jest wyłącznie związek osób różnej płci). Tego rodzaju interpretację Sąd Najwyższy, orzekający w niniejszej sprawie, w pełni podziela i nie znajduje podstaw do uznania za przekonywujące tych wypowiedzi pojawiających się w piśmiennictwie, w których podejmowane są próby kwestionowania takiej interpretacji omawianego pojęcia i sprowadzania go wyłącznie do konkubinatu (M. Płachta, K. Łojewski, A.M. Liberkowski). Rozumiejąc bowiem dążenia do rozszerzającej interpretacji pojęcia "wspólne pożycie", użytego w art. 115 § 11 k.k., należy jednak wskazać na całkowity brak w tym względzie dostatecznie precyzyjnych kryteriów.
^ "Judgment of the Constitutional Tribunal of 11 May 2005, K 18/04" . Polska Konstytucja określa bowiem małżeństwo jako związek wyłącznie kobiety i mężczyzny. A contrario nie dopuszcza więc związków jednopłciowych. [...] Małżeństwo (jako związek kobiety i mężczyzny) uzyskało w prawie krajowym RP odrębny status konstytucyjny zdeterminowany postanowieniami art. 18 Konstytucji. Zmiana tego statusu byłaby możliwa jedynie przy zachowaniu rygorów trybu zmiany Konstytucji, określonych w art. 235 tego aktu.
^ "Judgment of the Constitutional Tribunal of 9 November 2010, SK 10/08" . W doktrynie prawa konstytucyjnego wskazuje się nadto, że jedyny element normatywny, dający się odkodować z art. 18 Konstytucji, to ustalenie zasady heteroseksualności małżeństwa.
^ "Judgment of the Supreme Administrative Court of Poland of 25 October 2016, II GSK 866/15" . Ustawa o świadczeniach zdrowotnych finansowanych ze środków publicznych nie wyjaśnia, co prawda, kto jest małżonkiem. Pojęcie to zostało jednak dostatecznie i jasno określone we wspomnianym art. 18 Konstytucji RP, w którym jest mowa o małżeństwie jako o związku kobiety i mężczyzny. W piśmiennictwie podkreśla się, że art. 18 Konstytucji ustala zasadę heteroseksualności małżeństwa, będącą nie tyle zasadą ustroju, co normą prawną, która zakazuje ustawodawcy zwykłemu nadawania charakteru małżeństwa związkom pomiędzy osobami jednej płci (vide: L. Garlicki Komentarz do art. 18 Konstytucji, s. 2-3 [w:] Konstytucja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej. Komentarz, Wydawnictwo Sejmowe, Warszawa 2003). Jest wobec tego oczywiste, że małżeństwem w świetle Konstytucji i co za tym idzie – w świetle polskiego prawa, może być i jest wyłącznie związek heteroseksualny, a więc w związku małżeńskim małżonkami nie mogą być osoby tej samej płci.
^ "Judgment of the Supreme Administrative Court of Poland of 28 February 2018, II OSK 1112/16" . art. 18 Konstytucji RP, który definiuje małżeństwo jako związek kobiety i mężczyzny, a tym samym wynika z niego zasada nakazująca jako małżeństwo traktować w Polsce jedynie związek heteroseksualny.
^ *Gallo D; Paladini L; Pustorino P, eds. (2014). Same-Sex Couples before National, Supranational and International Jurisdictions . Berlin: Springer. p. 215. ISBN 978-3-642-35434-2 . the drafters of the 1997 Polish Constitution included a legal definition of a marriage as the union of a woman and a man in the text of the constitution in order to ensure that the introduction of same-sex marriage would not be passed without a constitutional amendment.
Marek Safjan; Leszek Bosek, eds. (2016). Konstytucja RP. Tom I. Komentarz do art. 1-86 . Warszawa: C.H. Beck Wydawnictwo Polska. ISBN 9788325573652 . Z przeprowadzonej powyżej analizy prac nad Konstytucją RP wynika jednoznacznie, że zamieszczenie w art. 18 Konstytucji RP zwrotu definicyjnego "związek kobiety i mężczyzny" stanowiło reakcję na fakt pojawienia się w państwach obcych regulacji poddającej związki osób tej samej płci regulacji zbliżonej lub zbieżnej z instytucją małżeństwa. Uzupełniony tym zwrotem przepis konstytucyjny "miał pełnić rolę instrumentu zapobiegającego wprowadzeniu takiej regulacji do prawa polskiego" (A. Mączyński, Konstytucyjne podstawy prawa rodzinnego, s. 772). Innego motywu jego wprowadzenia do Konstytucji RP nie da się wskazać (szeroko w tym zakresie B. Banaszkiewicz, "Małżeństwo jako związek kobiety i mężczyzny", s. 640 i n.; zob. też Z. Strus, Znaczenie artykułu 18 Konstytucji, s. 236 i n.). Jak zauważa A. Mączyński istotą tej regulacji było normatywne przesądzenie nie tylko o niemożliwości unormowania w prawie polskim "małżeństw pomiędzy osobami tej samej płci", lecz również innych związków, które mimo tego, że nie zostałyby określone jako małżeństwo miałyby spełniać funkcje do niego podobną (A. Mączyński, Konstytucyjne podstawy prawa rodzinnego, s. 772; tenże, Konstytucyjne i międzynarodowe uwarunkowania, s. 91; podobnie L. Garlicki, Artykuł 18, w: Garlicki, Konstytucja, t. 3, uw. 4, s. 2, który zauważa, że w tym zakresie art. 18 nabiera "charakteru normy prawnej").
Scherpe JM, ed. (2016). European Family Law Volume III: Family Law in a European Perspective Family . Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-78536-304-7 . Constitutional bans on same-sex marriage are now applicable in ten European countries: Article 32, Belarus Constitution; Article 46 Bulgarian Constitution; Article L Hungarian Constitution, Article 110, Latvian Constitution; Article 38.3 Lithuanian Constitution; Article 48 Moldovan Constitution; Article 71 Montenegrin Constitution; Article 18 Polish Constitution; Article 62 Serbian Constitution; and Article 51 Ukrainian Constitution.
Stewart J, Lloyd KC (2016). "Marriage Equality in Europe" . Family Advocate . 38 (4): 37–40. Article 18 of the Polish Constitution limits the institution of marriage to opposite-sex couples.
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External links
International Lesbian and Gay Association
Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual: Law at Curlie
Amnesty International USA: LGBT legal status around the world – interactive map
Pride Legal Archived 5 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine – information by country
Human Rights Watch on LGBT Rights
International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission resource links – for researching legal information
International Commission of Jurists , Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Justice – A Comparative Law Casebook
United Nations Human Rights Council , Discriminatory laws and practices and acts of violence against individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity , an annual report
United Nations , Living Free and Equal: What States Are Doing to Tackle Violence and Discrimination against Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex People , November 2016