Hungary: Difference between revisions
Bumblefudge (talk | contribs) added a link to hungarian wiki about official deadnaming policy and passport-gender policies, as well as immigration process nuance. |
Bumblefudge (talk | contribs) added link to LGBTQ+ healthcare provider. |
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Unless Hungary gets forcibly ejected from the European Union, however, a Hungarian passport holder can live and work without a visa in any other EU country. Going through the birthright process of getting a passport may require promising to live and documenting a plan of living in Hungary, as well as an entirely [https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transznem%C5%B1s%C3%A9g#Betilt%C3%A1s deadnamed] application. | Unless Hungary gets forcibly ejected from the European Union, however, a Hungarian passport holder can live and work without a visa in any other EU country. Going through the birthright process of getting a passport may require promising to live and documenting a plan of living in Hungary, as well as an entirely [https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transznem%C5%B1s%C3%A9g#Betilt%C3%A1s deadnamed] application. | ||
LGBTQ+ Healthcare, though embattled, is still publicly offered by some providers such as [https://prizma.lgbt/szolgaltatok/?ca=5 Prizma] (unvetted/unconfirmed); HRT may be possible but surgery is anecdotally impossible. |
Revision as of 10:42, 13 February 2025
While birthright citizenship is relatively easy to achieve where a direct lineage can be proven to a Hungary-born citizen, alarming reports about both de facto and de jure discrimination in daily life and immigration administration make this a less-desirable option among European countries.
Unless Hungary gets forcibly ejected from the European Union, however, a Hungarian passport holder can live and work without a visa in any other EU country. Going through the birthright process of getting a passport may require promising to live and documenting a plan of living in Hungary, as well as an entirely deadnamed application.
LGBTQ+ Healthcare, though embattled, is still publicly offered by some providers such as Prizma (unvetted/unconfirmed); HRT may be possible but surgery is anecdotally impossible.