
Below are the 2025 scores of the 49 European countries based on the Inclusive Compulsory Education Curricula indicator.
Below are the 2022 scores of the 49 European countries based on the Inclusive Compulsory Education Curricula indicator.
Below are the 2018 scores of the 49 European countries based on the Inclusive Compulsory Education Curricula indicator.
The general invisibility and lack of positive representation of LGBTQI people in schools can have harmful effects on all students, contributing to stigma, misinformation, and exclusion. The meaningful inclusion of LGBTQI identities and experiences across curricula and learning materials provides teachers with regular opportunities to address diversity and foster an inclusive learning environment. It is equally important to ensure that these materials promote positive messages and avoid reinforcing negative stereotypes or misinformation.
While some countries offer voluntary or elective lessons on LGBTQI topics, IGLYO maintains that such content should be integrated throughout the entire curriculum, or, at a minimum, included in mandatory lessons for all students. Accordingly, countries have been assessed based only on their compulsory curricula.
Although 23 Member States have developed voluntary or arbitrary inclusion of LGBTQI issues, they have only been embedded throughout the full curriculum or, at least, been compulsory for all students, in 15 Member States: Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and United Kingdom.
Out of these countries, only 20% are inclusive of sexual orientation, 47% have developed inclusive curricula for sexual orientation and gender identity as well as gender expression, and only 33% have also included positive inclusive materials on variations in sex characteristics.
CoE Member States have have developed voluntary or arbitrary inclusion of LGBTQI issues and embedded it throughout the full curriculum or, at least, made it compulsory for all students.
CoE Member States have developed voluntary or arbitrary inclusion of LGBTQI issues.
Below are the 10 indicators we used to evaluate each country. Each indicator is rated out of 10 based on how many grounds of discriminations it covers (ie. Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity & Expression, and Sex Characteristics) and whether the country has anti-LGBTQI measures in place. The highest possible score for a country is 100, and the lowest is -15. You can find more details about our methodology in our full Report.