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E.U.’s top court rules same-sex marriages must be recognized across all member states

Europe’s highest court handed married same-sex couples a sweeping legal victory. The Court of Justice of the European Union ruled that every E.U. member state must recognize same-sex marriages legally performed anywhere else in the bloc — meaning that for thousands of families, a move across a border no longer means losing the rights they built together.

At a glance

  • Same-sex marriage recognition: The CJEU ruled that all 27 E.U. member states must legally recognize same-sex marriages performed in other member countries, so civil status follows a couple wherever they go within the bloc.
  • Freedom of movement: The ruling closes a legal gap that allowed countries like Poland and Romania to deny recognition, effectively stripping couples of residency rights, inheritance protections, and tax benefits when they relocated.
  • Binding precedent: The judgment is binding on all member states and gives advocates a stronger legal foundation to challenge other discriminatory national practices across the union.

The couple behind the case

The ruling grew from one family’s ordeal. A Polish couple who married in Berlin returned home and asked Polish authorities to register their marriage. Polish law defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman, and officials refused.

The CJEU found that refusal violated the couple’s E.U. citizenship rights. The court drew a careful but consequential line: member states remain free to set their own domestic marriage laws, but they cannot erase a legal status their own citizens acquired under the law of another member state.

In practice, that means a couple married in Spain or the Netherlands does not stop being married when they cross into a country that has not legalized same-sex unions. Their rights travel with them.

What recognition actually means for families

Marriage recognition is not symbolic. Without it, same-sex couples moving between countries faced cascading legal problems — partners denied residency, children left in legal limbo, estates contested without inheritance protections.

ILGA-Europe, one of the continent’s leading LGBTQ+ advocacy organizations, has documented these practical hardships extensively and welcomed the ruling as a major step toward ending the bureaucratic discrimination that same-sex families have faced simply for crossing a border.

The ruling does not require any country to perform same-sex marriages. But once a couple is married — anywhere in the E.U. — that marriage must be treated as valid everywhere in the E.U. That is a meaningful, enforceable guarantee.

A precedent that reaches all 27 members

The judgment is not advisory. It binds every E.U. member state and aligns with a growing body of European case law that treats discrimination based on sexual orientation as incompatible with the union’s foundational values.

The European Parliament has tracked LGBTQ+ rights progress across member states for years, and this ruling advances that record significantly. Activists in countries with more conservative legislation now have firmer legal ground from which to challenge other discriminatory practices.

The European Court of Human Rights continues to play a complementary role, reinforcing protections at the regional level. Together, these institutions form a legal framework that increasingly refuses to let borders become barriers to equality.

For more on how the E.U. has measured rights outcomes across member states, the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights publishes regular data on LGBTQ+ equality that gives this ruling important context.

An uneven road ahead

Still, the path forward is not smooth. Enforcement depends partly on national courts and governments that may resist implementation — and political will varies sharply across the bloc. A ruling, however landmark, is only as strong as its follow-through.

Rulings like this one don’t happen in isolation. They build on decades of advocacy, litigation, and the accumulated weight of millions of ordinary lives lived across borders. The CJEU’s decision affirms that the E.U. is not just an economic project but a legal community with a shared commitment to human dignity — and for same-sex couples, it means that belonging is no longer something they have to surrender at a border.

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For more on this story, see: Top court rules E.U. nations must mutually recognize same-sex marriages

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