05/14/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/14/2025 00:19
The UK has dropped six places in ILGA-Europe's Rainbow Map, as Hungary and Georgia also register steep falls following anti-LGBTI legislation. The data highlights how rollbacks on LGBTI human rights are part of a broader erosion of democratic protections across Europe
Hungary has dropped seven places to 37th on ILGA-Europe's Rainbow Map with the first Pride ban in the European Union, closely followed by the United Kingdom dropping six places to 22nd after a Supreme Court ruling in its wording defined a woman strictly by "biological sex" (see reasoning here). Georgia has also dropped seven places following a sweeping anti-LGBTI law package that mirrors the Russian anti-democratic playbook.
Hungary's prohibition of Pride events and criminalisation of participants, the UK Supreme Court's ruling restricting the legal recognition of trans people, and Georgia's sweeping ban on all forms of LGBTI representation and assembly are not isolated incidents. They are merely the most striking examples of a broader trend in which LGBTI human rights are being systematically dismantled under the guise of preserving public order. In reality, such measures pave the way for sweeping restrictions on fundamental freedoms, including the rights to protest and to political dissent.
While Pride is being targeted in Hungary to suppress the right to assemble, the Italian government is advancing Bill 1660, which similarly threatens freedom of assembly. The bill proposes harsh penalties, including fines and up to six years' imprisonment, for protests that block roads, railways, ports or airports. It also allows authorities to pre-emptively ban individuals from public spaces based solely on prior reports or charges, without requiring a conviction. Bulgaria and Slovakia have also regressed, adopting laws that further restrict the rights to assembly, association and expression.
Alongside the UK Supreme Court ruling, Georgia and Hungary have removed references to 'gender identity and expression' from their legislation, but the erosion of trans rights extends beyond what can be easily captured by the Rainbow Map. Across Europe, anti-trans measures are being weaponised primarily through healthcare restrictions that are harder to quantify but equally damaging.
With LGBTI people being targeted and made vulnerable to attack, too few countries are adopting laws that advance LGBTI rights. Germany was the only country to reform legal gender recognition to a self-determination model last year; only Austria extended protections against discrimination through amendments to the Federal Equal Treatment Act; and no country banned conversion practices or adopted laws prohibiting unnecessary medical and surgical interventions on intersex children.
Only Belgium, the Brčko District (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Ireland, the Netherlands, Scotland (UK) and Sweden have affirmatively strengthened their laws and policies on hate crimes this year.
Even in countries where progress has been made on this year's Rainbow Map, the influence of the far right continues to grow. In Germany, Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands, recent elections have seen far-right groups gaining ground, threatening the hard-won human rights and freedoms of LGBTI people.
According to ILGA-Europe's Advocacy Director, Katrin Hugendubel: "The big headlines about the UK and Hungary draw attention, but democracy is being eroded quietly across Europe, like a thousand paper cuts. Centre and far-right actors in the EU are targeting NGO funding to weaken organisations that defend rights, while at the national level we are seeing laws introduced that do not address any genuine societal need but are designed purely to marginalise. Hungary's constitutional amendment stating that 'the mother is a woman and the father is a man' and that 'gender is defined by birth' is a clear example."
Hugendubel continued: "Along with mirroring the Russian playbook, these developments closely echo the tactics seen in the US so far under Trump's second term. Measures such as his executive orders restricting access to trans-specific healthcare and the rollback of DEI initiatives in federal agencies seek to undermine protections for trans people and limit LGBTI inclusion. Similar moves in the UK, Hungary, Georgia and beyond signal not just isolated regressions, but a coordinated global backlash aimed at erasing LGBTI rights, cynically framed as the defence of tradition or public stability, but in reality designed to entrench discrimination and suppress dissent."
There are signs of progress in countries where LGBTI rights have faced significant challenges. Poland, last year's lowest-ranked EU country on the Rainbow Map, has moved up three places after abolishing the last of its so-called 'LGBT-free zones' and ending state obstructions for LGBTI public events. Czechia rose three places with a new law extending rights for same-sex partners, granting registered partnerships. Still falling short of the longstanding demand for marriage equality, the new law grants nearly the same legal recognition as marriage, except for joint adoptions. Latvia advanced four places thanks to its new law allowing same-sex couples to enter civil unions, becoming the second Baltic state to offer partnership rights for same-sex couples.
While overt and covert attacks on LGBTI human rights continue to spread, activists and civil society across Europe remain resilient, often turning to the courts to defend and advance fundamental freedoms. The CJEU advanced rights in the EU by ruling that Hungary must correct the gender markers of transgender refugees without requiring proof of surgery, and by declaring that France's gender-based railway ticketing system violated GDPR, discriminating against non-binary and transgender individuals.
In Czechia, the Constitutional Court struck down the requirement of sterilisation for legal gender recognition, although the government has yet to implement the ruling. Lithuania's Constitutional Court invalidated the country's "anti-propaganda" law, a significant victory that has already come into effect. In Slovenia, the Constitutional Court affirmed that same-sex partners and single women must be granted access to medically assisted insemination. Spain's Constitutional Court blocked attempts by Madrid's regional authorities to curtail federal LGBTI and trans protections, safeguarding national legal standards.
In Croatia, rainbow families continue to challenge administrative barriers to adoption through strategic litigation. In Italy, thousands of court cases are underway, defending the rights of rainbow families, trans people and LGBTI asylum seekers. Across the region, despite mounting challenges, activists are securing meaningful victories, demonstrating that determined legal action can uphold and expand LGBTI rights even in hostile environments.
According to the Executive Director of ILGA-Europe, Chaber: "The Rainbow Map 2025 offers a stark snapshot of where Europe stands on LGBTI human rights, and highlights the pressing need to defend and advance these rights in the context of acute democratic erosion. If left unchallenged, these tactics risk spreading further across Europe, undermining a human rights framework that has taken decades to build. The time to push back is now, before the targeted attacks we're seeing in countries like Hungary, the UK and Georgia become the norm rather than the exception. Political leaders must lead by example and turn their words into action. It's time for people to stand up, make their voices heard, and hold our governments to account before it's too late."
The Rainbow Map - ILGA-Europe's annual benchmarking tool - comprises the Rainbow Map and Index and national recommendations. ILGA-Europe have produced the Rainbow Map and Index since 2009, using it to illustrate the legal and policy situation of LGBTI people in Europe.
The Rainbow Map and Index ranks European countries on their respective legal and policy practices for LGBTI people, from 0-100%.
In order to create our country ranking, ILGA-Europe examine the laws and policies in 49 countries using 76 criteria, divided between seven thematic categories: equality and non-discrimination; family; hate crime and hate speech; legal gender recognition; intersex bodily integrity; civil society space; and asylum. More information on the list of criteria and their weight on the total score can be found at https://rainbowmap.ilga-europe.org/about/
Policymakers, researchers and journalists are able to go 'behind' the points and see the original information sources that we base our Map ranking on. This additional layer of information is available through our interactive website at https://rainbowmap.ilga-europe.org/
The top five countries are (in ascending order): 1. Malta, 2. Belgium, 3. Iceland, 4. Denmark, and 5. Spain.
There is no change in the bottom five countries (in descending order): 45. Belarus, 46. Armenia, 47. Turkey, 48. Azerbaijan, and 49. Russia.
Austria, Latvia, Germany, Czechia, and Poland recorded the biggest jumps in their rankings:
Hungary, Georgia and the UK recorded the biggest falls in their rankings:
Further data: