South Korea’s top court upholds the rights of people in same-sex relationships in historic ruling
South Korea’s Supreme Court just ruled that same-sex couples must receive the same National Health Insurance spousal benefits as heterosexual couples — declaring that denying them violates “human dignity and the right to pursue happiness.” The case began when So Seong-wook and Kim Yong-min sued after the insurer revoked coverage it had already granted, then demanded repayment. Their five-year legal journey ended with the country’s highest court extending a concrete, practical protection to partners who previously had no legal pathway to claim it. While South Korea still doesn’t recognize same-sex marriage, the court’s use of dignity-based language matters beyond this case. It’s a reminder that progress on equality often arrives one couple, one ruling at a time — opening doors that legislatures haven’t yet been willing to.

