Rainbow flag flying above a European city square for an article about same-sex family recognition in Lithuania

Lithuanian court recognizes same-sex couple as a family for the first time

A district court in Vilnius has done what Lithuania’s parliament has repeatedly refused to do. In May 2025 C.E., the Vilnius City District Court ruled that a same-sex couple constitutes a legal family and ordered the state to register their relationship as a civil status record — the first such ruling in Lithuanian history. The decision was won through years of litigation by the LGBTQ+ rights organization TJA and attorney Aivaras Žilvinskas, and it opens a direct legal pathway for other couples to follow.

At a glance

  • Same-sex family recognition: The Vilnius City District Court granted legal family status to a same-sex couple and directed the state to register their relationship — the first ruling of its kind in Lithuanian history.
  • Constitutional backing: On April 17, 2025 C.E., Lithuania’s Constitutional Court found that excluding same-sex couples from civil partnership recognition violated constitutional rights to equality, human dignity, and family life.
  • Legislative gap: The Seimas, Lithuania’s parliament, has not yet passed civil partnership legislation, leaving courts as the primary avenue for recognition while the government’s mandate to create a registration mechanism goes unfulfilled.

How a constitutional ruling became a lived reality

The April 2025 C.E. Constitutional Court decision set the legal stage. It found that restricting civil partnerships to opposite-sex couples violated core constitutional principles, and it directed the government to establish a registration mechanism while parliament drafted formal legislation. The Vilnius case translated that ruling into something concrete and personal.

Two people went to court, invoked the constitutional decision, and won. Žilvinskas, who represented the couple, described the outcome as proof that ordinary citizens can defend their rights through the judiciary even when lawmakers stall. “This victory is a sign of hope for all couples waiting to be recognised,” he said, adding that his team would provide legal assistance to others seeking the same path.

Constitutional rulings don’t automatically reach people’s lives. This case showed they can — and that the distance between a court decision and lived reality can be closed through organized legal effort.

What the ruling does — and doesn’t — do

The decision does not establish marriage equality. Lithuania’s constitution still prohibits same-sex marriage, and comprehensive civil partnership legislation remains absent. What the ruling does create is a legal precedent that other couples can follow through the courts — a case-by-case pathway that, while imperfect, is now demonstrated to work.

TJA chair Artūras Rudomanskis was candid about what drove the litigation in the first place. “This legal process is just part of a bigger picture, as it began and continued for several years out of despair — when some Lithuanian citizens are treated as unequal in the eyes of their state,” he said. “Our politicians delayed taking responsibility for too long, so we had to go to court.”

The cases initiated in 2023 C.E. have now reached Lithuania’s Constitutional Court and the European Court of Human Rights, whose decisions on related matters are still pending. That international dimension adds weight to domestic progress — and pressure on the Seimas to act before courts do the work for it.

Lithuania in the European context

Lithuania remains one of the few E.U. member states where same-sex marriage is constitutionally prohibited and civil unions have no legislative framework. Most of Western and Northern Europe formalized same-sex unions years or decades ago. Parts of Central and Eastern Europe are now beginning to shift — through courts, through referendums, and through gradual legislative movement.

This ruling places Lithuania within that broader arc. It signals that judicial effort can drive progress where parliaments move slowly — a pattern seen in other countries where courts have acted ahead of legislatures on civil rights questions. Human rights organizations have tracked this dynamic across multiple legal systems, noting that precedent-setting cases often accelerate legislative timelines even when they don’t replace them.

Public opinion in Lithuania is genuinely divided. Urban and younger populations show stronger support for legal recognition; rural areas and older voters tend toward more conservative views. That divide has shaped the Seimas’s reluctance to legislate even as E.U. membership carries human rights obligations Lithuania has formally accepted. Progress built through courts rather than legislatures can feel fragile — each win is individual, each case requires legal access that not everyone has. That’s a real limitation worth naming.

Precedents accumulate

One ruling does not transform a legal system. But it shifts what is possible for the next couple who walks into a courtroom. The TJA has said it will assist other couples seeking the same recognition, meaning the infrastructure for replication already exists.

The right to family life recognized in this ruling is not new — it is affirmed in instruments Lithuania has ratified, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Courts applying that principle domestically are doing exactly what those frameworks are designed to enable. What comes next depends partly on parliament, partly on how many couples choose this legal pathway, and partly on whether political will eventually catches up to constitutional reality.

For now, two people in Vilnius have something they did not have before: official recognition that their family is real.

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For more on this story, see: LRT English

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