- Homosexuality
- ⚢✔ Legal
- Gay Marriage
- ⚭✖ Banned
- Censorship
- ✔ No censorship
- Changing Gender
- ✖ Legal, but requires medical diagnosis
- Gender-Affirming Care
- ✖ Legal, but restricted for minors
- Non-Binary Gender Recognition
- ✖ Not legally recognized
- Discrimination
- ✔ Illegal
- Employment Discrimination
- ✔ Sexual orientation and gender identity
- Housing Discrimination
- ✔ Sexual orientation and gender identity
- Adoption
- ✖ Illegal
- Intersex Infant Surgery
- ✖ Not banned
- Military
- ✔ Legal
- Donating Blood
- ✖ Banned (6-month deferral)
- Conversion Therapy
- ✖ Not banned
- Age of Consent
- ✔ Equal
Public Opinion
Belgrade is lacking public opinion data.
Help expand our understanding of the public's view on LGBTQ+ issues in Belgrade by sharing a link to a survey from a reputable organization.
Suggest Public Opinion DataHave you lived in or visited Belgrade?
Share your experience of being LGBTQ+ in Belgrade.
Take SurveyHistory
Homosexual activity in Belgrade is legal.
Consensual sex between two men was punishable by up to one year in prison.
Article 186: for unnatural fornication between persons of the male sex, the perpetrator shall be punished with imprisonment for up to two years.
The 1959 amendment reduced the prison sentence by one year.
Paragraph 285: for unnatural fornication between persons, the perpetrator shall be punished with strict imprisonment, unless the act turns into a more serious crime.
Same-sex marriage in Belgrade is banned.
Censorship of LGBT issues in Belgrade is no censorship.
However, in October 2022, the Ministry of Education and the Expert Commissions decided to review seven biology textbooks in which "disputable contents of LGBT propaganda" were allegedly found.
Right to change legal gender in Belgrade is legal, but requires medical diagnosis.
The first case of legal gender change was recorded on June 5, 1992, when the Municipal Secretariat for the General Administration of the Municipality of Savski Venac in Belgrade issued a decision approving the correction of the registered gender "from female to male" for a female person in the birth register.
Gender-affirming care in Belgrade is legal, but restricted for minors.
Legal recognition of non-binary gender in Belgrade is not legally recognized.
LGBT discrimination in Belgrade is illegal.
Also, the 2006 Constitution prohibits discrimination in general but it does not mention sexual orientation or gender identity.
LGBT employment discrimination in Belgrade is sexual orientation and gender identity.
LGBT housing discrimination in Belgrade is sexual orientation and gender identity.
Same-sex adoption in Belgrade is illegal.
(1) spouses or common-law partners together
(2) the spouse or common-law partner of the child's parent
(3) exceptionally, with the permission of the cabinet minister responsible for families, a person who lives alone if particulary justified reasons exist for doing so
This practically means that single persons (regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity) cannot adopt a child.
Intersex infant surgery in Belgrade is not banned.
Serving openly in military in Belgrade is legal.
In 2010, the Serbian Army officially announced that there is no discrimination in the Army on any basis, including sexual orientation.
In 2014, trans woman Major Helena sued the military after she was forcefully retired due to coming out as trans. In 2015, the Minister of Defense denied that there was discrimination in the Serbian Army and at the same time apologized to transgender Major Helena for, as he said, an administrative error in the decision on her retirement ("an established diagnosis that can cause harmful consequences for the reputation of the Serbian Army").
Blood donations by MSMs in Belgrade is banned (6-month deferral).
An affirmative answer meant an automatic lifetime ban on donating blood for the donor.
Conversion therapy in Belgrade is not banned.