Denmark In 2006, five
Social Liberal MPs introduced a resolution asking the
Cabinet of Denmark to draft a gender-neutral marriage law. The resolution was debated in Parliament and opposed by members of the conservative governing coalition. The Minister for the Family,
Carina Christensen, argued that registered partners already had the same rights as married partners except for the ability to marry in church, and thus that gender-neutral marriage was unnecessary. In January 2008, the Social Liberal Party's Equality Rapporteur,
Lone Dybkjær, called for the legalization of same-sex marriage. The Copenhagen Mayor for Culture and Recreation, Pia Allerslev, from the liberal then-governing party, also publicly supported same-sex marriage, as did the Lord Mayor of Copenhagen,
Ritt Bjerregaard. In June 2010, the Parliament once again debated a same-sex marriage bill proposed by the opposition parties. It was rejected on a 52–57 vote. A motion calling for legalization was also voted down. In October 2011,
Manu Sareen, the
Minister for Equality and
Church Affairs, announced that the
Thorning-Schmidt I Cabinet was seeking to legalize same-sex marriage by spring 2012. On 18 January 2012, the government published two draft bills. One of the bills would introduce a gender-neutral definition of marriage and allow same-sex couples to marry either in civil registry offices or in the
Church of Denmark. In addition, registered partners would be able to convert their unions into marriages. The other bill would allow individual priests to refuse to conduct same-sex marriages. Other religious communities would also be allowed to conduct same-sex marriages but would not be compelled to do so. The bills were under consultation until 22 February 2012. On 14 March 2012, the cabinet submitted both bills to the
Folketing. The bills were approved 85–24 on 7 June 2012 and received
royal assent () by Queen
Margrethe II on 12 June. The new laws took effect on 15 June 2012. The legislation was opposed by the
Danish People's Party and the
Christian Democrats, a religious conservative party, although the latter were not represented in the Danish Parliament at the time. Under the law, ministers can refuse to carry out same-sex marriage ceremonies, but they must arrange replacements for their church buildings. The first same-sex marriage in Denmark occurred on 15 June at the
Frederiksberg Church in
Copenhagen between
Stig Elling and Steen Andersen, who had been together for 27 years. Article 1 of the
Marriage Act () was amended to read as follows: :
Loven finder anvendelse på ægteskab mellem to personer af forskelligt køn og mellem to personer af samme køn. :() In
Danish, same-sex marriage is known as or more commonly as () or (, meaning "gender-neutral marriage").
Greenland Denmark's registered partnership law was extended to
Greenland on 26 April 1996. Denmark's marriage law, as supported by the
Naalakkersuisut, was to be considered by the
Inatsisartut in the spring of 2014, but was postponed beyond the year due to early
parliamentary elections. Legislation to grant same-sex couples marriage and adoption rights had its first reading on 25 March 2015. It was approved unanimously on second reading on 26 May 2015. It came into effect on 1 April 2016. Greenland's registered partnership law was repealed on the same day that the same-sex marriage law came into effect.
Faroe Islands Denmark's registered partnership law was never extended to the
Faroe Islands, and until 2017 it was the only
Nordic region to not recognize same-sex unions in any form. A set of bills to extend the Danish gender-neutral marriage law to the Faroe Islands was submitted to the
Løgting on 20 November 2013, though was rejected at second reading on 13 March 2014. Following the
Faroese general election in September 2015, a same-sex marriage bill was submitted to the Parliament. It received a first reading on 24 November 2015. On 26 April 2016, following a significant amount of parliamentary maneuvering, the bill passed its second reading by a vote of 19–14. It passed its final reading on 29 April 2016. The Danish Parliament voted unanimously to ratify the changes to its own marriage law on 25 April 2017. Minister of Justice
Søren Pape Poulsen subsequently allowed the law to go into effect on 1 July 2017. Legislation exempting the
Church of the Faroe Islands from performing same-sex marriages passed the Faroese Parliament on 30 May 2017, and went into effect on 1 July alongside the new marriage law. The first same-sex wedding in the Faroe Islands was performed on 6 September 2017.
Impact A study by the Danish Research Institute for Suicide Prevention (), released in 2019, showed that the legalisation of same-sex marriage, as well as other supportive policies and legislation, had decreased the
suicide rate among same-sex partners. The study, conducted in both Sweden and Denmark, found a 46% fall in suicides of people in same-sex unions between the periods 1989–2002 and 2003–2016, compared to 28% among heterosexual couples.
Statistics , January 2018 The number of same-sex marriages performed in Denmark (excluding Greenland and the Faroe Islands) is shown in the table below. In 2021, the majority of same-sex marriages (79%) were performed in a civil ceremony, while 21% took place in a religious ceremony in the
Church of Denmark. One marriage was performed in an
embassy or
consulate outside of Denmark.
Religious performance Same-sex marriages can be officiated at places of worship of the
Church of Denmark and the
Church of Greenland, but not the
Church of the Faroe Islands, which under the 2017 law that legalised same-sex marriage in the Faroe Islands is exempt from performing same-sex weddings. Previously, a priest, Harald Søbye, had married several same-sex couples. He first officiated at the marriage of a male same-sex couple on 8 February 1973 on the suggestion of a journalist from the
Ekstra Bladet newspaper, which reported it as "the world's first gay wedding". On 25 February 1973, Søbye performed another wedding in a television programme, which was widely reported in the media. Over the following 15 years, Søbye performed approximately 210
blessings or weddings of same-sex couples. The marriages were not legally recognized, and proved controversial within the Church. The
Old Catholic Church in Sweden and Denmark and the
Forn Siðr — Ásatrú and Vanatrú Association in Denmark also support and solemnise same-sex marriages. The
Catholic Church opposes same-sex marriage and does not allow its priests to officiate at such marriages. In December 2023, the
Holy See published
Fiducia supplicans, a declaration allowing
Catholic priests to
bless couples who are not considered to be
married according to church teaching, including the blessing of same-sex couples. The
Bishop of Copenhagen,
Czeslaw Kozon, reacted to the declaration, "Everyone must be able to feel at home in the Church, accepted and loved, even if they cannot receive all sacraments... Living in a relationship that is not a marriage, including as persons of the same sex, must therefore not mean a lack of care on the part of the institutional Church or from the community of the congregation. Sexual orientation is not chosen voluntarily... A relationship between two people of the same sex can also contain values such as care and faithfulness..." ==Public opinion==