Historically, clinicians labelled trans people as
heterosexual or
homosexual relative to their
sex assigned at birth. Within the transgender community, sexual orientation terms based on gender identity are the most common, and these terms include lesbian, gay, bisexual, asexual, queer, and others.
Sexual orientation distribution According to a 2023 study based on United States (U.S.) data, transgender people are more likely to be a
sexual minority than
cisgender people are, including in "sexual orientation, behavior, and attraction". In terms of self-description, the most common were
bisexual (18.9%),
queer (18.1%), and
straight (17.6%). Also in the U.S., transgender respondents to one 2015 survey self-identified as queer (21%),
pansexual (18%),
gay,
lesbian, or
same-gender-loving (16%), straight (15%), bisexual (14%), and
asexual (10%). A second study found 23% reported being gay, lesbian, or same-gender-loving, 25% bisexual, 4% asexual, 23% queer, 23% straight and 2% something else.
Transgender women A 2015 survey of roughly 3,000 American
trans women showed that at least 60% were attracted to women and 55% were attracted to men. Of the trans women respondents, 27% answered gay, lesbian, or same-gender-loving, 20% answered bisexual, 19% heterosexual, 16% pansexual, 6% answered asexual, 6% queer, and 6% did not answer. In the 20th century, trans men attracted to women struggled to demonstrate the existence and legitimacy of their identity. Many trans men attracted to women, such as jazz musician
Billy Tipton, kept their trans status private until their deaths. Until the mid-2010s, medical textbooks commonly suggested that most transgender men were straight. However, a 2015 survey of roughly 2000 American trans men showed more variation in sexual orientation or sexual identity among trans men. 23% identified as heterosexual or straight. The vast majority (65%) identified their sexual orientation or sexual identity as queer (24%), pansexual (17%), bisexual (12%), gay/same-gender loving (12%), asexual (7%), and 5% did not answer. Author
Henry Rubin wrote that "[i]t took the substantial efforts of
Lou Sullivan, a gay FTM activist who insisted that female-to-male transgender people could be attracted to men." recounts his transition "from 40-something straight woman to the gay man he'd always known himself to be." Researchers eventually acknowledged the existence of this phenomenon, and by the end of the 20th century, psychiatrist
Ira Pauly wrote, "The statement that all female-to-male transgender are homosexual [Pauly means attracted to women] in their sexual preference can no longer be made."
Trans gay men have varying levels of acceptance within other communities.
Trans-feminine third genders Psychiatrist
Richard Green, in an appendix to
Harry Benjamin's 1966
The Transsexual Phenomenon, considers people who were
assigned male at birth who have adopted a more feminine gender role. They have in common early effeminacy, adulthood femininity, and attraction to masculine males. The
Hijra of the
Indian subcontinent are people who were assigned male at birth but occupy a female sexual and/or gender role, sometimes undergoing castration. As adults, they occupy a female role, but traditionally Hijra describe themselves as neither male nor female, preferring Hijra as their gender. Ibn Abd Al-Barh Al-Tabaeen, a companion of Aisha Umm ul-Mu'min'in who knew the same mukhannath as Mohammed, stated that "If he is like this, he would have no desire for women and he would not notice anything about them. This is one of those who have no interest in women who were permitted to enter upon women." That said, one of the Mukhannath of Medina during Muhammad's time had married a woman. ==Cultural status==