More rights won than any generation before. More legislation written against them than any year in recorded history. Both things are true at the same time.
Every legal protection LGBTQ+ Americans have came through direct action, litigation, and legislation fought against sustained organized opposition. None of it arrived easily. And the timeline of victories tracks almost exactly with a parallel timeline of coordinated attempts to reverse them.
Anti-LGBTQ+ legislation has broken its own record every year since 2020. 2025 set the new ceiling: more than 850 bills filed in a single year. The bills target healthcare access, sports participation, bathroom use, educational content, legal name recognition, and the right to exist visibly in public life.
Legislation does not exist in a vacuum. Every bill that removes a protection, criminalizes an identity, or signals that a group is unwelcome has documented effects on the health and safety of real people. The data on LGBTQ+ youth mental health, homelessness, and physical safety is not ambiguous.
The Williams Institute estimates that 1.6 million youth ages 13-17 identify as transgender in the United States. Of the 26 states that have passed healthcare bans for trans minors, those states are home to approximately 58% of the trans youth population. This is not a fringe policy — it is a majority-coverage ban.
LGBTQ+ workers face documented wage gaps, hiring discrimination, and workplace harassment at rates higher than their non-LGBTQ+ peers — despite federal employment protections existing since 2020. The gap is widest for transgender workers and LGBTQ+ workers of color.
Hate crimes against LGBTQ+ people have increased in four of the last five years. Anti-transgender violence in particular concentrates among Black and Latina transgender women. Simultaneously, books with LGBTQ+ content are being removed from school libraries at the fastest rate since tracking began.