- Homosexuality
- ⚢✔ Legal
- Gay Marriage
- ⚭Ambiguous
- Censorship
- ✔ No censorship
- Changing Gender
- ✔ Legal, no restrictions
- Gender-Affirming Care
- ✖ Restricted
- Non-Binary Gender Recognition
- ✔ Recognized
- Discrimination
- ✔ Illegal
- Employment Discrimination
- ✖ No protections
- Housing Discrimination
- Unknown
- Adoption
- Unknown
- Intersex Infant Surgery
- ✖ Not banned
- Military
- Unknown
- Donating Blood
- ✔ Legal
- Conversion Therapy
- Unknown
- Age of Consent
- ✔ Equal
Public Opinion
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Same-sex marriage in Kosi [Koshi] is ambiguous.
On 29 November 2023, the first same-sex couple in Nepal was able to register their marriage in the Dordi municipality, five months after the interim order was given. However, there are reports that other same-sex wedding applications have not been consistently registered.
In April 2024, Nepal's Ministry of Home Affairs ordered the recognition of same-sex marriage in all the country's jurisdictions.
Censorship of LGBT issues in Kosi [Koshi] is no censorship.
Right to change legal gender in Kosi [Koshi] is legal, no restrictions.
Section 12 of the Constitution of Nepal (2015) was written in such a way that requires the Nepalese Citizenship Certificates to include gender identity (as opposed to just gender). This provision only applies to the first Nepalese Citizenship Certificate issued, not to an already-issued certificate. However, the decision of Sunil Babu Pant, Anik Ranamagar and others v. Government of Nepal (2017), ruled that existing citizenship certificates should also be amended.
Nepal began issuing passports with “third gender”/“O” markers, after the Supreme Court decision Dilu Dibuja v. the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (2017) ordered that a transgender person should be given a passport that matched their Nepalese Citizenship Certificate.
In 2019, Nepal’s House of Representatives proposed a bill to amend the Citizenship Act that would impact the rights of trans persons. The bill proposed an onerous proof of "sex change" as a requirement for a person to obtain a change of gender marker on their Nepalese Citizenship Certificate. This goes in contradiction with the above Supreme Court cases.
In addition, many transgender people who have applied for a gender change have been able to see their gender marker changed on behalf of the civil status.
Despite this, the process of a legal gender change was only permissible for nonbinary people and trans women couldn't change their markers to female or trans men to male until 2024.
LGBT discrimination in Kosi [Koshi] is illegal.
LGBT employment discrimination in Kosi [Koshi] is no protections.
LGBT housing discrimination in Kosi [Koshi] is unknown.
Same-sex adoption in Kosi [Koshi] is unknown.
Intersex infant surgery in Kosi [Koshi] is not banned.
Serving openly in military in Kosi [Koshi] is unknown.
Blood donations by MSMs in Kosi [Koshi] is legal.
Conversion therapy in Kosi [Koshi] is unknown.
Equal age of consent in Kosi [Koshi] is equal.