Portugal’s parliament has passed a landmark law banning all gender transition procedures for minors, including puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and surgeries. The measure, approved on March 20, 2026, prohibits medical interventions aimed at altering a child’s biological sex and marks a decisive step to protect young people from irreversible harm and experimental gender ideology.
The legislation was driven by growing evidence from across Europe showing that such treatments carry serious long-term risks, including infertility, loss of sexual function, bone density problems, and increased mental health issues. Lawmakers emphasized that children are too young to consent to life-altering decisions that conflict with biological reality and natural development.
This ban aligns Portugal with a broader European shift away from the rushed “gender-affirming” model. Countries such as Sweden, Finland, Norway, and the United Kingdom have already sharply restricted these procedures for minors following critical reviews like the Cass Report, which found weak evidence of benefits and significant potential for harm.
Pro-family and conservative groups welcomed the decision as a necessary defense of children’s innocence and parental rights. The law prioritizes mental health support and counseling over medicalization, reflecting a return to common-sense policies that recognize the biological distinction between male and female.














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