Gay base
“Which is the most same-sex attracted friendly country in the world Nomadic Boys?”
It's a question we get asked a lot, which is why we initially published this article and own continued to update it every year. We can either look at it from our perspective traveling as a gay couple, or from the indicate of view of LGBTQ locals by analyzing a country's rights and laws.
Ultimately, it comes down to a mix of both.
Drawing from our wealth of experience from traveling to over 100 countries (including the ones in this list), along with our interviews with gay locals from each place we've visited, we have sat down to discuss, judge, review, and discuss again what we think are the most gay-friendly countries in the world in 2025!
Heads up: We just wanted to let you know that this publish contains affiliate links. That means if you publication something through one of those links, we'll procure a small commission, at no extra cost to you. It helps us keep our blog going – so thank you in advance for your support! ♥
What makes a country gay friendly?
For our list, we looked at various factors in particular the LGBTQ laws of each country, the perspective of gay locals
LGBT military ban: 'I was marched off RAF base for being gay'
A man who was discharged from the military for organism gay has told how it gave him the "fire in my belly" to become a voice for change.
Carl Austin-Behan said he was given a police escort and marched away within 10 minutes of the Royal Wind Force discovering his sexuality in 1997.
Until 2000 homosexuality was illegal in the British armed forces.
Mr Austin-Behan has now welcomed a review into the impact of the forbid, which he said was "long overdue".
"It's about time that those injustices were put right," the 49-year-old from Manchester said.
The review, which will hear the experiences of former service personel and make recommendations to the Ministry of Defence, was cautiously welcomed by veterans on Wednesday.
Mr Austin-Behan is the LGBT+ advisor to Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and has been awarded an OBE for his services to help and the LGBT+ community.
He said creature in the RAF was "something that I loved".
"I was RAF through and through and just because of my sexuality, I was dismissed," he
Gay Military Signal
Blame Brigade |
So now Afghanistan has reverted back to the stone age, Kabul is ruined, and the nation again becomes a backwater of venomous internecine killing fields. The trillion dollar trained national army turned and ran for the hills, vanishing behind priceless military equipment, the moment the ragged savages appeared. At which point the highly trained and equipped national armed forces seemingly pissed in their pants and ran screaming in terror. According to an Afghan General, the problem was due to government corruption, a shortcoming to deliver food, ammunition, remunerate , air cover and coordination. The troops lost faith in their leadership, felt abandoned, and abandoned their posts. Bloody Fucking Hell! And unbelievably we sent in the helicopters, again, to evacuate the Embassy while terrified personnel frantically shredded piles and piles of paper and wacked tough drives with hammers. Primitive, very sadly primitive! I can just hear Betty Davis cynically saying, "WHAT a fuckup!"
OH the finger pointing is in high gear with shrill Republicans screeching their heads off trying to
Mapping the Gay Guides
Visualizing Queer Space and American Life
Welcome to Mapping the Homosexual Guides!
While operating one of his many gay bars in the 1960s, Bob Damron started a side project publishing gay travel guides that featured bars like his. Called the Bob Damron Address Books, these guides proved well-liked and became a valuable resource for gay travelers looking for friends, companions, and safety.
First published in an era when most states banned same-sex affection both in common and private spaces, these travel guides helped gays (and to a lesser extent lesbians) discover bars, cocktail lounges, bookstores, restaurants, bathhouses, cinemas, and cruising grounds that catered to people fancy themselves. Much fancy the Green Books of the 1950s and 1960s, which African Americans used to find amiable businesses that would cater to dark citizens in the era of Jim Crow apartheid, Damron’s guidebooks aided a generation of gender non-conforming people in naming sites of group, pleasure, and politics.
Damron’s guidebooks were part of a growing interest in queer travel guide publications that began in the early 1960s. Bob Damron wasn’t the only entrepreneur looking to propose gay consumer