Padova Pride 2026
Padova Pride, organised by Arcigay Padova, routes through the university city's porticoed streets. May or June 2026. Expected 8…
Europe
LGBTQ+ Travel Guide & City Directory
Based on national laws as of 2025
Homosexuality decriminalised in 1890 (Zanardelli Code) � one of the earliest in Europe. Same-sex civil unions ("unioni civili") legal since 5 June 2016 (Cirinn? Law / Law 76/2016), granting near-parity with marriage in most civil matters: inheritance, hospital visitation, next-of-kin, pension survivor rights, residency for foreign partners. Same-sex marriage not legal. Joint adoption not permitted. Step-child adoption historically allowed case-by-case by courts, but actively restricted by the Me
2,870,000 residents
Lombardy
1,400,000 residents
Campania
970,000 residents
Piedmont
870,000 residents
Sicily
670,000 residents
Liguria
580,000 residents
Emilia-Romagna
400,000 residents
Tuscany
380,000 residents
Apulia
325,000 residents
Sicily
310,000 residents
Veneto
260,000 residents
Veneto
260,000 residents
Veneto
215,000 residents
Friuli-Venezia Giulia
205,000 residents
Lombardy
200,000 residents
Umbria
162,000 residents
Emilia-Romagna
155,000 residents
Sardinia
154,000 residents
Lombardy
122,000 residents
Sicily
11,000 residents
Padova Pride, organised by Arcigay Padova, routes through the university city's porticoed streets. May or June 2026. Expected 8…
Rome Pride 2026, known locally as Roma Pride, marches triumphantly through the Eternal City's ancient streets each June, transf…
Florence Pride marches through some of the world's most important Renaissance streets — the route from Piazza della Repubblica …
Verona Pride has particular political resonance: it marches in a city governed by politicians who have historically opposed it,…
MIX Milano is one of Italy's longest-running LGBTQ+ film festivals, typically held in early June — just before Pride — at cinem…
Bologna Pride is one of Italy's most politically engaged Pride events, reflecting the city's deep tradition of left-wing activi…
Rome's Gay Scene: Things You MUST Know Before You Go
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Italy is moderately LGBTQ+ friendly in tourist and central urban areas. Social attitudes vary — Rome, Milan and Bologna have established gay scenes; rural southern Italy is more conservative. Italy lags behind most of Western Europe on legal recognition.
No — Italy recognises same-sex civil unions (Cirinnà law, 2016) which provide most marriage-equivalent rights, but full same-sex marriage is not yet legal. Joint adoption is not allowed under the civil union framework.
Rome (the "Gay Street" area near the Colosseum, plus Testaccio), Milan (the Porta Venezia area), Bologna, Florence, Naples and Sicily's Taormina. Mykonos-style summer beach scenes exist on parts of the Italian coast.
Roma Pride is mid-June. Milano Pride is late June. Bologna, Florence and Naples hold Pride parades in late spring and summer. Gay Village in Rome runs as a summer-long open-air festival from June through September.
Yes — many boutique hotels in central Rome, Milan and Florence are gay-friendly. Some explicit gay-popular options exist (Eden Hotel Rome, Babuino 181). See each city page for current listings.
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