Northern Ireland

Same-sex marriages in Northern Ireland: 800 ceremonies in the three years after legislation passed

Legislation to allow same-sex marriage in Northern Ireland took effect on January 13 2020

The number has been on a broad upwards path since ceremonies became legal in England and Wales in March 2014
Legislation to allow same-sex marriage in NI took effect on 13 January 2020 (Alamy Stock Photo)

There were more than 800 same-sex marriages in the three years after it became legal in Northern Ireland, latest figures show.

Legislation to allow same-sex marriage in the north took effect on January 13 2020.

Figures show there were 158 same-sex marriages in the first year of the new legislation with the number increasing to 396 in 2021.

However, statistics from the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency reveal that in 2022 the number fell to 266.

Other figures show that around 167,000 people in England and Wales are likely to be in same-sex marriages.

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The number has been on a broad upwards path since ceremonies became legal in March 2014.

Some 26,000 people are estimated to have been in a same-sex marriage in England and Wales by the end of 2015, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).



By 2018, the figure had reached nearly 121,000, then held steady for the next few years before climbing to 167,000 in 2022.

This represents 0.7% of the total number of married people in England and Wales – up from 0.1% in 2015.

Separate figures from the ONS show that 4,850 same-sex marriages took place in England and Wales between March 29 2014 – the day they became legal – and the end of that year, with female couples accounting for 56% and males 44%.

The number jumped to 6,493 in 2015, the first full calendar year in which the ceremony was legal in both nations, and remained broadly level for the rest of the decade, with 7,019 same-sex weddings taking place in 2016, 6,932 in 2017, 6,925 in 2018 and 6,728 in 2019.

In 2020, the last year for which data on ceremonies is currently available, Covid-19 restrictions saw the number drop sharply, to 2,811.

There has been a similar trend in Scotland, where same-sex marriages became legal on December 16 2014.

Some 367 marriages were recorded in the few remaining days before the end of 2014, followed by 1,671 in 2015, according to the National Records of Scotland.

The number then held steady in 2016 (998), 2017 (982), 2018 (979) and 2019 (912), before falling steeply in 2020 (423).

Data for Scotland is more recent than that for England and Wales, and shows the number picked up in both 2021 (819) and 2022 (1,112).