Members' Research Service By / June 27, 2025

Hungary’s Pride ban

The mayor of Budapest announced that Budapest Pride will be held as a municipal event, but the Budapest police have issued a decision prohibiting this.

© ink drop / Adobe Stock

Written by David De Groot.

On 18 March 2025, a law was adopted in Hungary restricting the freedom of assembly, by connecting it to a previous controversial law from 2021 that prohibited the public portrayal to children of ‘divergence from self-identity corresponding to sex at birth, sex change or homosexuality’. An amendment to the Hungarian Constitution adopted on 14 April 2025 further reinforced this.

On the basis of this law, Budapest police decided to ban Budapest Pride. While at first some of the police’s decisions were annulled by the Hungarian Supreme Court on procedural grounds and required new decisions, the Supreme Court later upheld these decisions and refused to check the law against the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) or make a preliminary reference to the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). The Supreme Court considered that this case is not within the CJEU’s jurisdiction.

The mayor of Budapest announced that Budapest Pride will be held as a municipal event, but the Budapest police have issued a decision prohibiting this.


Read the complete briefing on ‘Hungary’s Pride ban‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.


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