Australia Laws regarding assisted suicide in Australia are a matter for
state and territory governments. Physician assisted suicide is currently legal in all Australian states: New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania and Queensland. It remains illegal in all Australian territories, however the Australian Capital Territory plans to legalise this by 2024, and the Northern Territory is holding an investigation due to report in 2024. Under Victorian law, patients can ask medical practitioners about assisted suicide, and doctors, including conscientious objectors, should refer to appropriately trained colleagues who do not conscientiously object. Health practitioners are restricted from initiating conversation or suggesting VAD to a patient unprompted. Physician assisted suicide was legal in the
Northern Territory for a short time under the
Rights of the Terminally Ill Act 1995, until this law was overturned by the Federal Parliament which also removed the ability for territories to pass legislation relating to assisted dying, however this prohibition was repealed in December 2022 with the passing of
Restoring Territory Rights Act 2022. The highly controversial 'Euthanasia Machine', the first invented voluntary assisted dying machine of its kind, created by
Philip Nitschke, utilised during this period is presently held at London's
Science Museum.
Austria In December 2020, the
Austrian Constitutional Court ruled that the prohibition of assisted suicide was unconstitutional.
Belgium The Euthanasia Act legalized voluntary euthanasia in Belgium in 2002, but it did not cover physician-assisted suicide.
Canada In Canada, physician-assisted suicide was first legalized in the province of Quebec on 5 June 2014. It was declared nationally legal by the
Supreme Court of Canada on 6 February 2015, in
Carter v. Canada (Attorney General). National legislation formalizing physician-assisted suicide passed in mid-June 2016, for patients facing an estimated death within six months. Eligibility criteria have been progressively expanded over time. As of March 2021, individuals no longer need to be terminally ill in order to qualify for assisted suicide. Legislation allowing for assisted suicide for mental illness was expected to come into force on 17 March 2023, but has since been postponed until 2027. Between 10 December 2015 and 30 June 2017, 2,149 medically assisted deaths were documented in Canada. Research published by Health Canada illustrates physician preference for physician-administered voluntary euthanasia, citing concerns about effective administration and prevention of the potential complications of self-administration by patients.
China In China, assisted suicide is illegal under Articles 232 and 233 of the
Criminal Law of the People's Republic of China. In China, suicide or neglect is considered homicide and can be punished by three to seven years in prison. In May 2011, Zhong Yichun, a farmer, was sentenced to two years imprisonment by the People's Court of Longnan County, in China's Jiangxi Province for assisting Zeng Qianxiang to die by suicide. Zeng had a mental illness and repeatedly asked Zhong to help him die by suicide. In October 2010, Zeng took excessive sleeping pills and lay in a cave. As planned, Zhong called him 15 minutes later to confirm that he was dead and buried him. However, according to the autopsy report, the cause of death was from suffocation, not an overdose. Zhong was convicted of criminal negligence. In August 2011, Zhong appealed the court sentence, but it was rejected. This ruling owes its success to the efforts of a group that strongly opposed voluntary euthanasia. When one of its members brought a lawsuit to the Colombian Supreme Court against it, the court issued a 6 to 3 decision that "spelled out the rights of a terminally ill person to engage in voluntary euthanasia".
Denmark Assisted suicide is illegal in Denmark. Passive euthanasia, or the refusal to accept treatment, is not illegal. A survey from 2014 found that 71% of Denmark's population was in favor of legalizing voluntary euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide.
France Assisted suicide is not legal in France. The controversy over legalising voluntary euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide is not as big as in the United States because of the country's "well developed
hospice care programme". However, in 2000 the controversy over the topic was ignited with . After a car crash that left him "unable to 'walk, see, speak, smell or taste'", he used the movement of his right thumb to write a book,
I Ask the Right to Die (), in which he voiced his desire to "die legally".
Germany Killing somebody in accordance with their demands is always illegal under the
German criminal code (Paragraph 216, "Killing at the request of the victim"). That said, assisting suicide is now generally legal as the
Federal Constitutional Court has ruled in 2020 that it is generally protected under the
Basic Law. This milestone decision overturned a ban on the commercialization of assisted suicide and set out an entirely new course for countries or jurisdictions contemplating such a provision. Since suicide itself is legal, assistance or encouragement is not punishable by the usual legal mechanisms dealing with complicity and incitement (German criminal law follows the idea of "accessories of complicity" which states that "the motives of a person who incites another person to commit suicide, or who assists in its commission, are irrelevant"). Whereas the traditional approach for establishing an assisted dying service has always been based on identifying criteria for who was eligible for it predicated on a view regarding a person's acceptable quality of life (e.g. condition of health or illness), the ruling by the German court stated that government in pluralist societies can not do so as it would violate one's autonomy, the principle of person-state separation. That suggests an alternative model for an assisted dying regime similar to that in Switzerland where no government legislated regime was created but where the provision has existed for decades.
Travel to Switzerland Between 1998 and 2018 around 1,250 German citizens (almost three times the number of any other nationality) travelled to
Dignitas in Zurich, Switzerland, for an assisted suicide, where this has been legal since 1998. Switzerland is one of the few countries that permit assisted suicide for non-resident foreigners.
Physician-assisted suicide Physician-assisted suicide was formally legalised on 26 February 2020 when Germany's top court removed the prohibition of "professionally assisted suicide".
Iceland Assisted suicide is illegal.
Ireland Assisted suicide is illegal. "Both euthanasia and assisted suicide are illegal under Irish law. Depending on the circumstances, euthanasia is regarded as either manslaughter or murder and is punishable by up to life imprisonment."
Italy In Italy, assisted suicide has been conditionally allowed since 2019 under specific circumstances following the
Italian Constitutional Court ruling 242/2019. While active euthanasia remains illegal, assisted suicide is permitted if the following conditions are met: • The patient suffers from an irreversible condition. • The patient experiences physical or psychological suffering that they deem unbearable. • The patient is dependent on life-sustaining treatments. • The patient is fully capable of making free and informed decisions. The aforementioned conditions, as well as the methods of assistance for a freely and autonomously requested assisted suicide, must be verified by a public healthcare structure with prior approval from the relevant ethics committee. In 2024 the Court upheld its previous ruling and clarified that: • life-sustaining treatments are not limited to those administered by medical staff but can also include those provided by family members or caregivers • the ruling also applies to patients who require life-sustaining treatments but have chosen to refuse them. As of September 2025, the
Italian Parliament has not yet legislated on the regulation of assisted suicide, while the regional councils of
Sardinia and
Tuscany have passed regional laws outlining organisational procedures for implementing Constitutional Court rulings, and the Regional Councils of
Apulia and
Emilia-Romagna have taken administrative action through regional resolutions. The remaining 16
Italian regions still need to intervene in establishing procedures and timelines. On 16 June 2022, the first assisted suicide was performed. As of 25 March 2026, 14 people have received assisted suicide in Italy.
Jersey On 25 November 2021, the
States Assembly voted to legalise assisted dying and a law legalising it will be drafted in due course. The Channel Island is the first country in the
British Islands to approve the measure. The proposition, which was lodged by the Council of Ministers, proposes that a legal assisted dying service should be set up for residents over the age of 18 with a terminal illness or other incurable suffering. The service will be voluntary and methods are either physician-assisted suicide or euthanasia. This follows a campaign and overwhelming public support. Paul Gazzard and his late husband Alain du Chemin were key actors in the campaign in favour of legalising assisted dying. A citizen's jury was established, which recommended that assisted dying be legalised in the island. Voluntary euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide were legalized in the country in April 2009.
Netherlands In 2002, the Netherlands became the first country in the world to formally legalize voluntary euthanasia. Physician-assisted suicide is legal under the same conditions as voluntary euthanasia. Physician-assisted suicide became allowed under the act approved in 2001 which became effective in 2002 and states the specific procedures and requirements needed in order to provide such assistance. Assisted suicide in the Netherlands follows a medical model which means that only doctors of patients who are suffering "unbearably without hope" are allowed to grant a request for an assisted suicide. The Netherlands allows people over the age of 12 to pursue an assisted suicide when deemed necessary. In the Netherlands assisted dying followed by organ donation is also legal. Under Section 179 of the Crimes Act 1961, it is illegal to 'aid and abet suicide' and this will remain the case outside the framework established under the End of Life Choice Act.
Norway Assisted suicide is illegal in
Norway. It is considered murder and is punishable by up to 21 years imprisonment.
Portugal The Law n.º 22/2023, of 22 May, legalized physician-assisted death, which can be done by physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia. Physician-assisted death can only be permitted to adults, by their own decision, who are experiencing suffering of great intensity and who have a permanent injury of extreme severity or a serious and incurable disease. The law is not yet in force, because the government has to regulate it first. It states in Article 31 that the regulation must be approved within 90 days of the publishing of the law, which would have been 23 August 2023. However, the regulation has not yet been approved by the government. According to Article 34, the law will only enter into force 30 days after the regulation is published. On 24 November 2023, the Ministry of Health said the regulation of the law would be the responsibility of the new government elected in the
10 March 2024 elections.
Slovenia Assisted suicide is illegal in
Slovenia and punishable by up to 5 years of prison unless there are aggravating or mitigating circumstances. The regulation of the "right to assistance in voluntary termination of life" was
supported in a consultative referendum that was held on 9 June 2024. A bill to regulate this right passed a parliamentary vote on 24 July 2025, but was rejected by a
quorum of voters in a
legislative referendum held on 23 November 2025. The proposed law was strongly opposed by medical organisations and the Church. He feels that because of the lack of doctors in the country, "[legalizing] euthanasia in South Africa would be premature and difficult to put into practice ...".
Switzerland Though it is illegal to assist a patient in dying in some circumstances, there are others where there is no offence committed. The relevant provision of the Swiss Criminal Code refers to "a person who, for selfish reasons, incites someone to commit suicide or who assists that person in doing so will, if the suicide was carried out or attempted, be sentenced to a term of imprisonment (
Zuchthaus) of up to 5 years or a term of imprisonment (
Gefängnis)." A person brought to court on a charge could presumably avoid conviction by proving that they were "motivated by the good intentions of bringing about a requested death for the purposes of relieving "
suffering" rather than for "selfish" reasons. In order to avoid conviction, the person has to prove that the deceased knew what they were doing, had the capacity to make the decision, and had made an "earnest" request, meaning they asked for death several times. The person helping also has to avoid actually doing the act that leads to death, lest they be convicted under Article 114: Killing on request (Tötung auf Verlangen) – A person who, for decent reasons, especially compassion, kills a person on the basis of their serious and insistent request, will be sentenced to a term of imprisonment (Gefängnis). For instance, it should be the suicide subject who actually presses the syringe or takes the pill, after the helper had prepared the setup. This way the country can criminalise certain controversial acts, which many of its people would oppose, while legalising a narrow range of assistive acts for some of those seeking help to end their lives. Switzerland is the only country in the world which permits assisted suicide for non-resident foreigners, In Switzerland non-physician-assisted suicide is legal, the assistance mostly being provided by volunteers, whereas in Belgium and the Netherlands, a physician must be present. In Switzerland, the doctors are primarily there to assess the patient's decision capacity and prescribe the lethal drugs. Additionally, unlike cases in the United States, a person is not required to have a terminal illness but only the capacity to make decisions. About 25% of people in Switzerland who take advantage of assisted suicide do not have a terminal illness but are simply old or "tired of life". 250 accompanied suicides took place under the
Dignitas program in Switzerland in 2023.
United Kingdom England and Wales Deliberately assisting a suicide is illegal. Between 2003 and 2006,
Lord Joffe made four attempts to introduce bills that would have legalised physician-assisted suicide in England and Wales. All were rejected by the UK Parliament. In the meantime, the Director of Public Prosecutions has clarified the criteria under which an individual will be prosecuted in England and Wales for assisting in another person's suicide. These have not been tested by an appellate court as yet. In 2014,
Lord Falconer of Thoroton tabled an Assisted Dying Bill in the House of Lords which passed its Second Reading but ran out of time before the general election. During its passage peers voted down two amendments which were proposed by opponents of the Bill. In 2015, Labour MP
Rob Marris introduced another Bill, based on the Falconer proposals, in the House of Commons. The Second Reading was the first time the House was able to vote on the issue since 1997. A Populus poll had found that 82% of the British public agreed with the proposals of Lord Falconer's Assisted Dying Bill. However, in a free vote on 11 September 2015, only 118 MPs were in favour and 330 against, thus defeating the bill. Another bill called
Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill on assisted suicide for terminally ill adults was voted on and passed on 29 November 2024, upon second reading. Further stages of Parliament's consideration of the bill should proceed.
Scotland Unlike the other jurisdictions in the United Kingdom, suicide was not illegal in Scotland before 1961 (and still is not) thus no associated offences were created in imitation. Depending on the actual nature of any assistance given to a suicide, the offences of murder or
culpable homicide might be committed or there might be no offence at all; the nearest modern prosecutions bearing comparison might be those where a culpable homicide conviction has been obtained when drug addicts have died unintentionally after being given "hands on" non-medical assistance with an injection. Modern law regarding the assistance of someone who intends to die has a lack of certainty as well as a lack of relevant case law; this has led to attempts to introduce statutes providing more certainty. Independent MSP Margo MacDonald's "End of Life Assistance Bill" was brought before the Scottish Parliament to permit physician-assisted suicide in January 2010. The
Catholic Church and the
Church of Scotland, the largest denomination in Scotland, opposed the bill. The bill was rejected by a vote of 85–16 (with 2 abstentions) in December 2010. The Assisted Suicide (Scotland) Bill was introduced on 13 November 2013 by the late
Margo MacDonald MSP and was taken up by
Patrick Harvie MSP on Ms MacDonald's death. The Bill entered the main committee scrutiny stage in January 2015 and reached a vote in Parliament several months later; however the bill was again rejected. The Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill was introduced by
Liam McArthur MSP on 27 March 2024. It would allow terminally adults to request and receive assistance from medical professionals to end their life.
Northern Ireland Health is a
devolved matter in the United Kingdom and as such it would be for the
Northern Ireland Assembly to legislate for assisted dying as it sees fit. As of 2018, there has been no such bill tabled in the Assembly.
United States Physician-assisted dying was first legalized by the 1994
Oregon Death with Dignity Act, with effect delayed by lawsuits until 1997. As of 2026, it is legal in the following states and districts: • Oregon since 1997 •
Washington (state) since 2008 • Montana since 2009 • Vermont since 2013 • California since 2016 • Colorado since 2016 •
Washington, D.C. since 2017 • Hawaii since 2018 • New Jersey since 2019 • Maine since 2020 • New Mexico since 2021 • Delaware since 2025 • Illinois since 2026 (starting in September) • New York since 2026 (starting in August) Montana is the only state in which medical aid in dying is legal due to a court ruling, rather than a state law. The
Montana Supreme Court ruled in
Baxter v. Montana (2009) that it found no state law or public policy reason that would prohibit physician-assisted dying. Access to the procedure is generally restricted to people with a terminal illness and less than six months to live. Patients are generally required to be mentally capable, to get approval from multiple doctors, and to affirm the request multiple times. For states in which it is illegal, the punishment for participating in medical aid in dying varies. For example, the state of Wyoming does not "recognize common law crimes and does not have a statute specifically prohibiting physician-assisted suicide". While in Florida, "every person deliberately assisting another in the commission of self-murder shall be guilty of manslaughter, a felony of the second degree".
Uruguay Assisted suicide, while criminal, does not appear to have caused any convictions, as article 37 of the Penal Code (effective 1934) states: "The judges are authorized to forego punishment of a person whose previous life has been honorable where he commits a homicide motivated by compassion, induced by repeated requests of the victim." ==Arguments for and against==