13 Countries That Are More Gay Friendly Than America

Publish date: 2024-06-30
2013-03-23T20:27:00Z

The U.S. Supreme Court is hearing two huge gay marriage cases on March 26 and 27.

But America still lags behind several other countries when it comes to equality for gays and lesbians.

With nearly half of Americans supporting gay marriage, gay rights advocates are hoping the U.S. will follow the lead of western European governments in establishing stronger federal legal protections for gay couples.

Dutch born Stephan Hengst (R) kisses his husband, American-born Patrick Decker, after being married by Amsterdam's Mayor Job Cohen on an official wedding boat during the Gay Pride Canal Parade in Amsterdam August 1, 2009. Reuters/Paul Vreeker/United Photos

So far, 11 countries have legalized same-sex marriage, according to the Pew Research Center, and seven of them are in western Europe or Scandinavia. Just one country each in Latin America and Africa allows gay couples to marry.

This list includes all the countries that have legalized gay marriage and a couple that have strong anti-discrimination laws and protections for same-sex relationships. 

The Netherlands was the first country to legalize gay marriage in 2000.

Peter Wittebrood-Lemke, Frank Wittebrood, Ton Jansen, Louis Rogmans, Helene Faasen, and Anne-Marie Thus, left to right, cut the wedding cake after exchanging vows at Amsterdam's City Hall early Sunday April 1, 2001. AP Photo/Peter Dejong

The groundbreaking law also gave couples in the Netherlands the right to adopt children.

Belgium followed suit and passed gay marriage in 2003.

Marion Huibrecht and Christel Verswyvelen became the first same-sex couple to marry in Belgium in 2003. Mark Renders/Getty Images

Three years after it legalized gay marriage, Belgium gave gay couples the right to adopt, according to Pew. Belgium has also outlawed employment discrimination based on sexual orientation.

Spain legalized gay marriage by a close margin in 2005.

Socialist Deputy and gay rights activist Pedro Zerolo, right, looks at his partner Jesus Santos after getting married by a civil ceremony in Madrid, Saturday Oct. 1, 2005. AP Photo/Bernat Armangue

Before it legalized same-sex marriage, Spain already banned employment discrimination against gays, according to a Harvard Law publication on the subject. In 2007, Spain passed a law that let people officially change their gender before going through a sex-change surgery.

Canada also passed gay marriage legislation in 2005.

Carter Etherington and Breken Elwood (R) salute the crowd after their official marriage ceremony on a parade float during the Gay Pride parade in Toronto on July 1, 2012. Reuters/Mark Blinch

Canada amended its human rights law all the way back in 1996 to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation.

South Africa became the first country in Africa to legalize gay marriage in 2006.

Lesbian couple Bathini Dambuza, left, and Lindiwe Radebe, right, show off their engagement rings as they pose for a photograph in Johannesburg Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2006, just before their country's government legalized gay marriage. AP Photo/Denis Farrell

South Africa's ban on discrimination against gays in its 1994 post-apartheid constitution made it one of the first countries in the world to outlaw discrimination based on sexual orientation, according to the BBC.

Norway passed a law allowing gay couples to marry, adopt children, and have artificial insemination in 2009.

Participants march in Oslo's Gay Pride Parade last June. Flickr/Tjook

Norway has put pressure on the U.N. to ensure that all countries decriminalize homosexuality.

Sweden legalized same sex-marriage in 2009.

Ewa Tomaszewicz (R) places a wedding ring on the finger of her partner Gosia Rawinska as they marry onboard a Scandinavian Airlines flight from Stockholm to Newark in December 2010. Reuters/Bob Strong

But same-sex couples have been allowed to register for civil unions since 1995, according to Pew.

Portugal became the eighth country to legalize same-sex marriage in 2010.

Teresa Paixao (L) and her partner Helena Pires smile as they become the first gay couple to marry in Portugal in June 2010. Reuters/Hugo Correia

The New York Times' Frank Bruni has noted that Portugal's decision to legalize gay marriage is remarkable given that it's tiny and "overwhelmingly Roman Catholic."

The Icelandic parliament legalized same-sex marriage in 2010.

Newlyweds Dufa Drofn Asbjornsdottir and Diana Dogg Hreinsdottir prepare to throw their bouquets at their wedding in Reykjavik September 25, 2010. Reuters/Ingolfur Juliusson

Iceland is also the only country in the world to have an openly gay head of state, Reuters has pointed out. 

Argentina became the first country in Latin America to legalize gay marriage in 2010.

Alex Freyre (L) holds his partner Jose Maria Di Bello at their home in Buenos Aires a month before they wed in Latin America's first gay marriage ceremony. The HIV-positive couple wears red ribbons in solidarity with other people living with HIV. Reuters/Marcos Brindicci

But the couple pictured here faced extreme opposition when they tried to marry. A judge tried to prevent them from marrying just days before their planned wedding in December 2009, according to Reuters.

Denmark legalized gay marriage in 2012, but has recognized same-sex domestic partnerships since 1989 (the first country in the world to do so).

Stig Elling and his husband Steen Andersen walk outside of Frederiksberg Church in Copenhagen after becoming one of the first gay couples to marry in a church on Friday, June 15, 2012 AP Photo/POLFOTO, Jens Dige

Denmark requires the state church to perform gay weddings, according to Pew. It was the first country to allow civil unions in 1989.

Britain's House of Commons has passed a gay marriage bill, the first step on the road to fully legalizing same-sex marriages.

Shannon Sickels, right, and Grainne Close leave Belfast City Hall, Northern Ireland in December 2005. They became the United Kingdom's first gay couple to win legal recognition for their civil parternship. AP Photo/Peter Morrison

The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA) ranked the U.K. the best country in Europe to be gay.

The German parliament is currently debating whether gay couples in a legal partnership should have the same full rights as heterosexual married couples.

Gay couple Kai (L) and Michael Korok and their daughter Jana, 4, attend the opening of Germany's first gay parent counseling center on March 15 in Berlin. Sean Gallup/Getty Images

A recent poll found that two-thirds of Germans support gay marriage, The New York Times reported in February.

Now see what other countries have laws the U.S. should consider enacting.

Flickr/trevy

23 Laws The US Should Adopt From Around The World >

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