# Honeymoon Destination Safety for Same-Sex Married Couples: 2026 Legal Status by Country

> The global legal map for same-sex couples spans full marriage equality to capital punishment. Here is the 2026 country-by-country picture, the authoritative sources to check before you book, and the destinations that welcome you fully.

*Published 2026-07-03 · By Dr. Elena Rossi, MD*

For most married couples, choosing a honeymoon destination is a question of climate, budget and romance. For same-sex married couples, one more question comes first and outranks the rest: what does the law of this place actually say about us, and how is it enforced? The answer spans an extraordinary range — from full marriage equality with warm cultural acceptance, to criminal penalties, to, in a small number of countries, capital punishment. Understanding where a destination sits on that spectrum is the single most important piece of pre-trip due diligence any same-sex couple can do.

This guide lays out the 2026 legal map, names the authoritative sources to check, identifies the destinations that welcome you fully, and gives a practical framework for the harder cases. It is written to inform a personal decision, not to make it for you.

Before you book anywhere: cross-check three live sources — the ILGA World Database, Equaldex, and the U.S. State Department's country-specific 'Local Laws & Customs' pages. Legal text and real enforcement can diverge; consult all three, not one.

## The 2026 legal spectrum, country by country

As of June 2026, per ILGA World, same-sex marriage is legally performed and recognized in **38 countries** — roughly 1.5 billion people, about 20% of the world's population. The most recent additions are Thailand (January 23, 2025, the first in Southeast Asia), Liechtenstein (January 1, 2025) and Nepal (a Supreme Court ruling on June 18, 2026). Full-equality countries include Canada, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States.

A second tier offers civil unions or registered partnerships carrying most but not all marital rights: Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Montenegro and San Marino. A November 2025 European Court of Justice ruling added weight to recognition within the EU, holding that all member states must recognize a lawfully contracted same-sex marriage from another member state for EU-law purposes such as residency and inheritance — though it did not compel non-recognizing states to perform marriages.

At the far end, ILGA World's May 2026 data confirms that **64 UN member states still criminalize** consensual same-sex acts, concentrated in Africa (31 of 54 nations) and the Middle East (10 of 18). The death penalty is legally prescribed in seven states — Iran, Saudi Arabia, Brunei, Mauritania, Nigeria (northern Sharia law), Uganda and Yemen — with uncertain exposure in five more: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Qatar, Somalia and the UAE. The map moves in both directions: Dominica, Namibia and Botswana have decriminalized recently, while Burkina Faso, Trinidad and Tobago, Senegal and Mali have criminalized or tightened laws since 2024.

## The five most welcoming honeymoon destinations

Full marriage equality is necessary but not sufficient; the destinations below pair it with strong anti-discrimination law and a lived culture of hospitality.

DestinationMarriage equality since2026 index noteWhy honeymooners choose it

Iceland2010#1 Gay Travel Index 2026Non-resident marriage; geothermal spas, glaciers, aurora
Portugal2010Joint #1 Spartacus 2025Lisbon/Porto scenes; Douro wine, Algarve coast, affordable
Canada2005Joint #4 Gay Travel Index 2026Non-resident marriage; distinct regional cities
New Zealand201381% public support (2023 Ipsos)Queenstown fjords and mountains; deeply accepting
Netherlands2001Top-ranked, ILGA-Europe Rainbow MapAmsterdam canal-house hotels; global tolerance reputation

Iceland legalized same-sex marriage by unanimous parliamentary vote in 2010 and is among the few countries permitting non-resident couples to marry within its borders. Portugal ranked joint first on the 2025 Spartacus Gay Travel Index, pairing vibrant Lisbon and Porto communities with the romance of the Douro and Algarve at a lower cost than Scandinavia. Canada legalized in 2005 and permits non-resident marriage. New Zealand — the first Oceanian country to legalize, in 2013 — sits in a social context where 81% of the public supported marriage or legal recognition in a 2023 Ipsos survey; Queenstown's luxury lodges welcome same-sex couples without distinction. And the Netherlands, the first country in the world to legalize in 2001, remains an iconic honeymoon city with a dense concentration of boutique hotels.

## Verifying a resort actually treats you equally

Policy statements are a floor, not proof. The most reliable indicator of genuine inclusion is operational: does the booking and check-in workflow accept 'two grooms' or 'two brides' without follow-up inquiry, and address welcome amenities to both names? [Booking.com's Travel Proud](https://www.booking.com/proud.html) program had certified more than 100,000 properties across 150 countries by November 2025, each having completed a 75-minute inclusive-hospitality training developed with HospitableMe; its searchable badge is a credible signal. Specialist agencies such as Out of Office go further, hand-verifying properties on direct client feedback rather than assuming equal treatment.

## Marrying abroad as foreign nationals

Several full-equality countries perform legal civil marriages for foreign nationals with little or no residency requirement: Canada, Iceland, Portugal, Spain, France and the Netherlands. Mexico's equality is nationwide (the process varies by state), and Thailand imposes only a three-day waiting period. The State Department's practical counsel for U.S. couples is to complete the legal marriage in the U.S. first, then celebrate abroad — sidestepping foreign paperwork. U.S. territories Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands require no passport and operate under federal protections, and in the Caribbean, Aruba and Curaçao gained equality via a July 2024 Dutch Supreme Court ruling.

## A framework for the harder cases

What about a destination with conservative laws but popular, professionally run resorts? Use four sources and weigh legal text against enforcement. The **State Department** country pages carry a 'Local Laws & Customs' subsection and a dedicated Gay and Lesbian Travelers page; enroll in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program for real-time alerts. **ILGA World** separates countries by whether laws are actively enforced, rarely enforced or symbolic. **Riskline's** annual LGBTQ+ Risk Map adds social-acceptance and transgender-rights granularity. And **Travel Guard's** LGBTQ+ security report, developed with HospitableMe, offers concrete guidance for criminalized jurisdictions — clearing device histories, being aware that dating apps may be monitored, and treating public displays of affection as potentially risky.

The operative question is not 'is it legal?' but 'what is the realistic enforcement environment and daily social climate for a couple presenting as same-sex?' The UAE criminalizes same-sex acts on paper yet has a documented pattern of not enforcing against discreet foreign tourists in resort settings — but that exposure is real, not zero. Jamaica's beach resorts are individually welcoming, yet same-sex acts remain illegal nationally and surrounding attitudes trend intolerant. Saudi Arabia and Iran are a different category entirely, enforcing capital provisions. Consulted together, these four sources give any couple the factual basis to make a fully informed, personally appropriate decision — which is exactly the point.

## Sources

1. [Pride Month: new ILGA World data and maps on laws affecting LGBTI people globally](https://ilga.org/news/pride-month-2026-lgbti-maps-data/)
2. [Gay and Lesbian Travelers](https://travel.state.gov/en/international-travel/planning/personal-needs/gay-lesbian.html)
3. [Same-sex marriage by country](https://www.equaldex.com/issue/marriage)
4. [Travel Proud](https://www.booking.com/proud.html)

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Source: https://eraaway.com/travel-smart/honeymoon-destination-safety-same-sex-couples
Index: https://eraaway.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://eraaway.com/llms-full.txt
