Three fifths (90 out of 150) of the votes in the
parliament are necessary to supplement and/or amend the Constitution. It has been amended several times. • Amendment from 14 July 1998: This is rather a minor amendment: The President could be elected on a suggestion of at least 8 MPs (the President was voted by the parliament at that time) and some of the President's powers were transferred to the Speaker of Parliament. • Amendment from 14 January 1999: President was no longer voted by the Parliament, and begun to be elected by popular vote for five years. It also changes the President's powers and relations between him and other institutions. • Amendment from 23 February 2001: It is the greatest amendment so far, relating to Slovakia's attempt to enter the
European Union (e.g. Slovakia will recognize international treaties). It also changes the electoral law, introduces
ombudsman to the Slovak law system, transfers right to name judges for unlimited time from parliament to the President and other major or minor changes in functions of nearly all institutions. • Amendment from 4 March 2004: Minor change to the constitution, from article 78, paragraph 2, where the last sentence was omitted. • Amendment from 14 May 2004: Amendment was in relation to the preparation to the
European Parliament election. It added sentence about inconsistency of being an MP in the Parliament and in the
European Parliament. It also extended rights of the
Constitutional Court of Slovakia for ruling whether the election to the EP is constitutional. • Amendment from 27 September 2005: Expanded the authority of the
Supreme Audit Office to include oversight of the finances of regional and local governments. In disputed cases, it granted the
Constitutional Court the authority to decide whether the Supreme Audit Office has the constitutional right of oversight in that case. • Amendment 3 February 2006 • Amendment 14 March 2006 • Amendment 4 March 2010 • Amendment 21 October 2011 • Amendment 26 July 2012 • Amendment from 4 June 2014: Defined marriage as a bond between one man and one woman. • Amendment from 21 October 2014: Banned the export of
drinking and
mineral waters in pipelines and water tanks. The ban excludes bottled water and water for personal use. • Amendment from 8 December 2015: Lengthened the general 48 hours limit for detention, in case of suspected terrorists to 96 hours. • Amendment from 2 February 2017: Lengthened the term of office of officials elected in 2017 regional county elections to five years. In June 2023, The Slovak parliament voted with the support of 111 of 150 MPs to put the right to use Cash in the Constitution of Slovakia. The amendment was proposed by
We Are Family. On 26 September 2025, The Slovak parliament voted for a constitutional amendment that formally recognize only
two genders (male and female), ban surrogacy and
adoption of children by same-sex couples. It will also include
equal pay for men and women. and gives the state full sovereignty in matters of national identity. The
Council of Europe notes potential conflicts regarding
primacy with
international law. ==See also==