WanderSafe — LGBTQ+ Travel Safety
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia criminalizes consensual same-sex sexual activity under an uncodified criminal system based on Sharia, where the maximum penalty is death (by judicial discretion) and lesser sentences include flogging, imprisonment, and fines; anti-cybercrime and public-decency laws are also used to prosecute online expression and gender nonconformity. There is no legal gender recognition, and 'imitating the opposite sex' is itself an offense, putting trans and gender-nonconforming travelers at acute risk. Islam is the enforced state religion: non-Muslim public worship and all non-Muslim houses of worship are prohibited, apostasy is punishable by death, and the country is designated by USCIRF as a recommended Country of Particular Concern. Saudi Arabia requires HIV testing for residency, and HIV-positive non-citizens face deportation rather than care. Riyadh, the capital, is heavily policed and socially conservative; there is no visible LGBTQ+ community, no Pride, and no openly operating local LGBTQ+ or HIV civil-society organizations, so travelers must rely on discretion and international resources.
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia is rated High Risk for LGBTQ+ travelers. Same-sex relations may be criminalized. Read the full assessment below before traveling.
Safety by Community
Confidence C · LGBTQ+ data as of 2026-06-18
- LGBTQ+ 9 (High Risk)
- Trans 6 (High Risk)
- HIV+ 24 (High Risk)
- Neurodivergent — not yet scored ⚠
- Blind / Low-vision — not yet scored ⚠
- Deaf / HoH — not yet scored ⚠
- Mobility — not yet scored
- Chronic illness — not yet scored
- Religious minorities 16 (High Risk)
Travel Warnings
Taboo topics: serious restriction
Blasphemy, apostasy, criticism of Islam, the royal family, or Saudi policy are serious speech crimes. Anti-Cybercrime Law and 2017 counter-terror law criminalize content that 'disturbs public order' or 'harms the reputation of the state'; LGBTQ+ advocacy and atheism are punishable. Know this before you travel.
Source: https://www.state.gov/reports/2023-country-reports-on-human-rights-practices/saudi-arabia/ · verified 2026-06-18
Photography restrictions: serious restriction
Photographing government buildings, military/security installations, palaces, and people (especially women) without consent can lead to detention. Tourists have been questioned for street photography; broad sensitivities apply. Know this before you travel.
Source: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/international-travel/International-Travel-Country-Information-Pages/SaudiArabia.html · verified 2026-06-18
Border device & social-media search: serious restriction
Authorities monitor and inspect electronic devices and social-media content; prohibited material (alcohol, pork, religious items other than Islam, political/LGBTQ+ content) can trigger detention. Surveillance of phones at entry is routine. Know this before you travel.
Source: https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/international-travel/International-Travel-Country-Information-Pages/SaudiArabia.html · verified 2026-06-18
Accessibility barrier: text-to-911
Saudi emergency numbers (999 police, 997 ambulance, 911 unified in Riyadh and major regions) are voice-based; there is no nationally available text-to-emergency or RTT service for the general public, mapping to 'no.' Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://www.my.gov.sa/ · verified 2026-06-18
Accessibility barrier: guide-dog entry
Dogs are subject to strict import controls and significant cultural and practical barriers in Saudi Arabia, and there is no recognized assistance/guide-dog access framework guaranteeing entry to public spaces; guide-dog import faces quarantine/permit friction and venue refusal, mapping to 'no.' Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://www.mewa.gov.sa/en · verified 2026-06-18
Police response during a crisis: documented risk
There is no established mental-health co-responder model, and police/public-morality enforcement are a documented risk for people behaving atypically in public, especially where behavior could be read as gender nonconformity or public-decency violation. With no specialized crisis training and elevated baseline risk, this maps to 'no' (risk floor).
Source: https://www.humandignitytrust.org/country-profile/saudi-arabia/ · verified 2026-06-18
Legal Status
Saudi Arabia has no single codified statute criminalizing homosexuality; instead, judges apply uncodified Islamic (Sharia) law, under which same-sex sexual activity is treated like other extramarital sexual conduct (zina/liwat) and the maximum punishment is death. In practice, penalties have ranged from imprisonment and flogging to capital sentences, and prosecutions also proceed under the Anti-Cyber Crime Law (2007) and public-decency provisions for online posts and gender nonconformity. The legal exposure applies to citizens and foreign nationals alike. The figures and categories below are drawn from the Human Dignity Trust country profile and US State Department reporting.
How these scores are computed
- Legal 0 — derived from 8 verified indicators (100% coverage)
- Safety 0 — derived from 6 verified indicators (100% coverage)
- Community 0 — derived from 5 verified indicators (100% coverage)
- Infrastructure 0 — derived from 7 verified indicators (100% coverage)
Anchors, weights, and the full formula are published in the methodology.
Emergency Contacts
999
997
998
911
rainbowrailroad.org
outrightinternational.org
www.humandignitytrust.org
Local Resources & Who to Contact
Vetted organizations and helplines that can assist travelers here. In countries where this community is criminalized, contact notes flag how to reach out safely.
www.rainbowrailroad.org
International organization that provides emergency risk assessments, support, and relocation assistance to LGBTQI+ people facing persecution; contact from outside Saudi Arabia before travel, as same-sex conduct carries the death penalty and there are no safe local LGBTQ+ organizations to approach inside the country.
outrightinternational.org
International LGBTIQ human-rights organization that documents conditions and supports advocates in the MENA region; a safer outside-the-country point of contact for referrals and emergency guidance given Saudi Arabia's criminalization and surveillance climate.
www.humandignitytrust.org
International legal organization providing know-your-rights information and strategic legal support on the criminalization of LGBT people; useful from abroad for understanding Saudi Arabia's Sharia and anti-cybercrime legal exposure before travel.
www.helem.net
Lebanon-based LGBTQ+ organization serving the wider Arab/MENA region with support, case management, and referrals; contact discreetly from outside Saudi Arabia, as there is no safe local equivalent and domestic monitoring is significant.
ilga.org
International federation that maps trans legal status and connects people to regional support networks; a safe-from-abroad starting point for trans travelers, since Saudi Arabia criminalizes 'imitating the opposite sex' and offers no legal gender recognition or trans-competent care.
+966-11-835-4000 · sa.usembassy.gov
For U.S. citizens detained or in crisis, the embassy provides consular assistance, attorney lists, and welfare checks; nationals of other countries should contact their own embassy in Riyadh. Note that contacting Saudi police directly carries risk for visibly LGBTQ+ or gender-nonconforming travelers.
Identity-Specific Guidance
Trans Women
Extreme danger. No legal recognition; 'imitating the opposite sex' is criminal; death penalty possible for same-sex conduct.
Saudi Arabia has no legal gender recognition, and the US State Department documents that it is illegal for men 'to behave like women' or to wear women's clothes. Trans women are highly visible and therefore highly exposed to prosecution under public-decency and anti-cybercrime laws, and to detention at checkpoints and in public spaces. Same-sex conduct can carry the death penalty under uncodified Sharia. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: do not carry identity documents reflecting a transition, present consistently with your documents, do not bring visible HRT without prescription documentation framed neutrally, use a VPN, carry no photos or apps that reveal your identity, and register with your embassy before arrival. Contact Rainbow Railroad before travel for a current risk assessment.
Trans Men
Extreme danger. No legal recognition; gender nonconformity prosecuted; same-sex conduct may carry death.
There is no legal pathway to change gender markers in Saudi Arabia, and 'imitating the opposite sex' is an offense under public-decency law. Documents inconsistent with perceived gender create immediate legal jeopardy at borders, hotels, and police stops. Same-sex sexual activity is criminalized with the death penalty available as the maximum punishment. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: keep documents consistent with presentation, avoid dating apps and any identifying device content, use a VPN, do not disclose trans status to providers or officials, and contact Rainbow Railroad before travel for guidance.
Gay Men
Extreme danger. Same-sex conduct criminalized with the death penalty as the maximum punishment; active cybercrime enforcement.
Saudi Arabia criminalizes male same-sex sexual activity under uncodified Sharia, where the maximum penalty is death and lesser sentences include flogging and imprisonment. The Anti-Cyber Crime Law is used to prosecute dating-app use, social-media posts, and private messages. Travel is strongly discouraged. If you must travel: assume devices and communications may be examined, avoid all dating apps, carry nothing identifying, use a VPN, do not discuss your identity with anyone, and never attend underground events. Register with your embassy and keep consular contacts accessible.
Lesbian & Bi Women
Extreme danger. Female same-sex conduct criminalized under Sharia; maximum penalty death; no recognition.
Female same-sex sexual activity is criminalized under the same uncodified Sharia framework, with death available as the maximum punishment. Strict gender norms, guardianship-related scrutiny, and public-decency enforcement add risk for women generally and especially for those perceived as gender-nonconforming or in same-sex relationships. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: keep relationships invisible, avoid dating apps and identifying device content, use a VPN, do not disclose your identity, and register with your embassy. Contact OutRight International or Rainbow Railroad before travel.
Nonbinary Travelers
Extreme danger. No recognition; strictly enforced binary dress codes; 'imitating the opposite sex' is criminal.
Saudi Arabia enforces a strict legal gender binary with no recognition of nonbinary identities, and 'imitating the opposite sex' is prosecuted under public-decency and anti-cybercrime laws. Any presentation read as gender-nonconforming raises risk at checkpoints, in public, and where documents are checked. Same-sex conduct can carry the death penalty. Travel is strongly discouraged. If unavoidable: present consistently with your identity documents, carry nothing identifying, use a VPN, do not disclose your identity to anyone, and contact Rainbow Railroad before travel for a current risk assessment.