WanderSafe — LGBTQ+ Travel Safety
Kuwait City, Kuwait
Kuwait criminalizes consensual sexual activity between men under Article 193 of the 1960 Penal Code, with a maximum penalty of seven years' imprisonment; sex between women is not named in the penal code but is effectively prohibited because sex is lawful only within heterosexual marriage. In a rare positive development for the region, Kuwait's Constitutional Court struck down Article 198 (which had criminalized 'imitating the opposite sex') as unconstitutional in February 2022 — but there is no legal gender recognition, and authorities have continued to target and deport transgender people through public-morals and immigration provisions, so trans and gender-nonconforming travelers remain at acute risk. Islam is the state religion; Kuwait recognizes some Christian churches and permits limited minority worship (unlike Saudi Arabia), but a defamation-of-religion (blasphemy) law restricts expression and conversion from Islam is administratively blocked. Kuwait requires HIV testing for residency and has deported expatriates who test HIV-positive rather than treating them. There is no visible LGBTQ+ community, no Pride, and no openly operating local LGBTQ+ or HIV civil-society organizations, so travelers must rely on discretion and international resources.
Kuwait City, Kuwait is rated High Risk for LGBTQ+ travelers. Same-sex relations may be criminalized. Read the full assessment below before traveling.
Safety by Community
Confidence C · LGBTQ+ data as of 2026-06-18
- LGBTQ+ 11 (High Risk)
- Trans 8 (High Risk)
- HIV+ 24 (High Risk)
- Neurodivergent — not yet scored ⚠
- Blind / Low-vision — not yet scored ⚠
- Deaf / HoH — not yet scored ⚠
- Mobility — not yet scored
- Chronic illness — not yet scored
- Religious minorities 41 (High Risk)
Travel Warnings
Taboo topics: serious restriction
Insulting the Emir, blasphemy, criticizing religion, and 'inciting sectarianism' are prosecuted. Same-sex relations are illegal and LGBTQ+ expression is criminalized. Online speech crimes carry prison terms. Know this before you travel.
Source: https://www.state.gov/reports/2023-country-reports-on-human-rights-practices/kuwait/ · verified 2026-06-18
Accessibility barrier: text-to-911
Kuwait's unified emergency number (112) is voice-based; there is no nationally available text-to-emergency or RTT service for the general public, mapping to 'no.' Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://www.moi.gov.kw/ · verified 2026-06-18
Accessibility barrier: guide-dog entry
Dogs are subject to import controls and significant cultural and practical barriers in Kuwait, and there is no recognized assistance/guide-dog access framework guaranteeing entry to public spaces; guide-dog import faces permit/quarantine friction and venue refusal, mapping to 'no.' Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://www.paaf.gov.kw/ · verified 2026-06-18
Police response during a crisis: documented risk
There is no established mental-health co-responder model, and police/public-morality enforcement are a documented risk for people behaving atypically in public, especially where behavior could be read as gender nonconformity or a public-morals matter. With no specialized crisis training and elevated baseline risk, this maps to 'no' (risk floor).
Source: https://www.humandignitytrust.org/country-profile/kuwait/ · verified 2026-06-18
Legal Status
Kuwait's 1960 Penal Code criminalizes consensual same-sex sexual activity between men under Article 193, which carries a maximum penalty of seven years' imprisonment. Sexual activity between women is not explicitly named in the penal code, but because sexual relations are lawful only within (heterosexual) marriage, female same-sex relationships are effectively prohibited. Until 2022, Article 198 separately criminalized 'imitation of the opposite sex'; Kuwait's Constitutional Court struck that provision down as unconstitutional in February 2022. The figures and categories below are drawn from the Human Dignity Trust country profile, US State Department reporting, Human Rights Watch, and Amnesty International.
How these scores are computed
- Legal 0 — derived from 8 verified indicators (100% coverage)
- Safety 0 — derived from 6 verified indicators (100% coverage)
- Community 0 — derived from 5 verified indicators (100% coverage)
- Infrastructure 0 — derived from 7 verified indicators (100% coverage)
Anchors, weights, and the full formula are published in the methodology.
Emergency Contacts
112
112
rainbowrailroad.org
outrightinternational.org
www.humandignitytrust.org
Local Resources & Who to Contact
Vetted organizations and helplines that can assist travelers here. In countries where this community is criminalized, contact notes flag how to reach out safely.
www.rainbowrailroad.org
International organization that helps LGBTQI+ people facing persecution assess risk and, where eligible, relocate to safety. Contact from outside Kuwait, ideally before travel; never disclose anything not already public, and assume domestic communications may be monitored.
outrightinternational.org/our-work/southwest-asia-and-north-africa/kuwait
International LGBTIQ human-rights org documenting Kuwait's LGBT situation and supporting activists. A safer outside-the-country point of contact for documentation, referrals, and emergency support; reach out discreetly and do not expose local contacts.
www.humandignitytrust.org
International legal organization providing know-your-rights information and strategic legal support on the criminalization of LGBT people. Useful from abroad for understanding Kuwait's Article 193, morality, and cybercrime exposure before or during travel; contact from outside the country.
menarights.org/en
Geneva-based legal-advocacy org documenting human-rights violations in the MENA region, including against LGBTQ+ and gender-nonconforming people in Kuwait. A discreet, outside-the-country channel for documentation and referral; do not transmit identifying details over unsecured channels from inside Kuwait.
dawnmena.org
Independent advocacy org documenting ongoing discrimination and deportation of transgender people in Kuwait despite the 2022 court ruling. Best used from abroad as a documentation and advocacy resource; protect your identity and that of any local contacts.
Identity-Specific Guidance
Trans Women
Extreme danger. No legal gender recognition; trans people still detained and deported despite the 2022 court ruling; same-sex conduct criminal.
Kuwait's Constitutional Court struck down the 'imitating the opposite sex' law (Article 198) in February 2022, but there is still no legal gender recognition, and Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International document that authorities continue to detain and deport transgender people using public-morals and immigration provisions. Trans women are highly visible and therefore highly exposed at checkpoints, in public spaces, and any time documents do not match perceived gender. Male same-sex conduct carries up to seven years under Article 193. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: do not carry documents reflecting a transition, present consistently with your documents, do not bring visible HRT without neutral prescription documentation, use a VPN, carry no photos or apps that reveal your identity, and register with your embassy before arrival. Contact Rainbow Railroad before travel for a current risk assessment.
Trans Men
Extreme danger. No legal recognition; trans people still targeted via public-morals/immigration law; same-sex conduct criminal.
There is no legal pathway to change gender markers in Kuwait. Although Article 198 ('imitating the opposite sex') was struck down in 2022, authorities have continued to detain and deport transgender people under public-morals and immigration provisions. Documents inconsistent with perceived gender create immediate legal jeopardy at borders, hotels, and police stops. Male same-sex sexual activity is criminalized with up to seven years under Article 193. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: keep documents consistent with presentation, avoid dating apps and any identifying device content, use a VPN, do not disclose trans status to providers or officials, and contact Rainbow Railroad before travel for guidance.
Gay Men
Extreme danger. Male same-sex conduct criminalized under Article 193 with up to seven years' imprisonment; documented raids and deportations.
Kuwait criminalizes male same-sex sexual activity under Article 193 of the 1960 Penal Code, with a maximum penalty of seven years' imprisonment. Enforcement is documented, including raids and mass arrests (41 arrested in a 2017 raid, with 76 men deported) and morality prosecutions; dating-app and social-media activity can be used as evidence. Travel is strongly discouraged. If you must travel: assume devices and communications may be examined, avoid all dating apps, carry nothing identifying, use a VPN, do not discuss your identity with anyone, and never attend underground events. Register with your embassy and keep consular contacts accessible.
Lesbian & Bi Women
High danger. Female same-sex activity not named in the penal code but effectively prohibited; no recognition; strict gender norms.
Female same-sex sexual activity is not explicitly named in Kuwait's penal code, but it is effectively prohibited because sex is lawful only within heterosexual marriage, and there is no recognition or protection. Strict gender and morality norms, censorship, and the risk that any same-sex relationship could be treated as a public-morals matter all add risk, especially for those perceived as gender-nonconforming. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: keep relationships invisible, avoid dating apps and identifying device content, use a VPN, do not disclose your identity, and register with your embassy. Contact OutRight International or Rainbow Railroad before travel.
Nonbinary Travelers
Extreme danger. No recognition; trans/gender-nonconforming people still targeted via public-morals law; same-sex conduct criminal.
Kuwait does not recognize nonbinary identities and offers no legal gender recognition. Although the 'imitating the opposite sex' law was struck down in 2022, authorities continue to detain and deport gender-nonconforming people using public-morals and immigration provisions. Any presentation read as gender-nonconforming raises risk at checkpoints, in public, and where documents are checked. Male same-sex conduct carries up to seven years under Article 193. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: present consistently with your identity documents, carry nothing identifying, use a VPN, do not disclose your identity to anyone, and contact Rainbow Railroad before travel for a current risk assessment.