×

Italy court extends widow pension rights to same-sex couples married abroad

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 9:25 AM

ROME, May 28 (Reuters) – Italy’s Constitutional Court said on Thursday that widow pension rights apply to same-sex couples who ​married abroad before civil partnerships were ‌legalised in the country, in another win for its LGBTQ+ community.

Italy’s 2016 law on civil unions grants same-sex couples some prerogatives normally associated with ‌heterosexual ​marriages, including the right to ⁠inherit a widow’s ⁠pension in case of death.

However, welfare agency INPS refused a pension to a man who lost his partner in 2015, on ​account of their marriage having been celebrated in 2013, in New York, before ⁠the Italian law came ⁠into force.

The man appealed, prompting ​a lawsuit that went all the way to ​the Constitutional Court. Ruling in his favour, ‌the court partly struck down a law from 1939, during Italy’s fascist era, which had been used to deny the payments.

Denying ⁠a widow’s pension to the surviving partner of a same-sex couple would result “in an unjustified disparity ⁠in treatment ‌compared to other categories of ⁠survivors’ pension recipients,” the court ​said ‌in a statement.

In a separate decision, ​an Italian ⁠court this month granted a 4-year-old child three legally recognised parents – two fathers and one mother – in a landmark ruling that angered conservative Catholics.

(Reporting by Alvise Armellini, editing by ​Rod Nickel)