• Nearly 30% of Gen Z women identify as LGBTQ, Gallup survey finds

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    from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/nearly-30-gen-z-women-identify-lgbtq-gallup-survey-finds-rcna143019

    Nearly 30% of Gen Z women identify as LGBTQ, Gallup survey finds
    Women ages 18 to 26 were more than twice as likely to identify as LGBTQ
    than their millennial counterparts, the survey found.
    Pride flag raising to kick off Pride Month in Doylestown
    People raise Bucks County's Pride Flag to kick off Pride Month in
    Doylestown, Pa., on June 1.Hannah Beier / Reuters


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    March 13, 2024, 1:00 AM PDT
    By Brooke Sopelsa
    The percentage of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer adults
    in the U.S. continues to increase, reaching an all-time high of 7.6% in
    2023, according to a new Gallup report. Broken down by gender, the
    survey of 12,000 people 18 and older across the country found that women
    were nearly twice as likely as men to identify as LGBTQ.

    “Almost 30% of Gen Z women identify as LGBTQ+, most as bisexual,”
    Jeffrey Jones, a senior editor at Gallup, told NBC News. “That’s where a lot of the growth seems to be happening.”

    This is the first year Gallup has laid out its annual LGBTQ
    identification report in a way that breaks down each generation by
    gender. Looking at all generations, 8.5% of women and 4.7% of men
    identified as LGBTQ, the survey found. The survey reported margins of
    sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points among LGBTQ respondents.

    Parsing each generation, the gender story gets more interesting. In the
    three younger generations surveyed — Generation Z, millennials and
    Generation X — women are more likely than men to identify as LGBTQ.
    However, in the two oldest generations — baby boomers and the Silent Generation — it is reversed. (The gender breakdown does not account for nonbinary respondents, who represented about 1% of those surveyed.)

    The group most likely to identify as LGBTQ, by far, was Generation Z
    women (ages 18 to 26), 28.5% of whom identified as LGBTQ in the survey.
    The lion’s share of them, of all Gen Z women surveyed, 20.7%, identified
    as bisexual, followed by 5.4% who identified as lesbians. Gen Z women
    were nearly three times more likely than Gen Z men to identify as LGBTQ.


    Bisexuals made up the highest percentage of LGBTQ respondents, at 57.3%
    — or 4.4% of all adults surveyed. Gay men represented 18.1% of LGBTQ respondents, lesbians 15.1% and transgender people 11.8%, the survey found.

    “It’s important how much the LGBTQ community is bisexual, and that’s definitely something we see among the younger generations,” Jones said.

    Jones also noted that the survey allows respondents to write in their identities if they are not among the provided options, and he said more
    people are writing in “pansexual” and “asexual,” though they are still a
    small proportion of respondents — 3% of LGBTQ respondents and 0.2% of
    total respondents.

    As Gallup has noted in its previous annual surveys, younger generations
    are far more likely to identify as LGBTQ than their older counterparts.

    “Overall, each younger generation is about twice as likely as the
    generation that preceded it to identify as LGBTQ+,” says the report,
    which was published Wednesday. “More than one in five Gen Z adults,
    ranging in age from 18 to 26 in 2023, identify as LGBTQ+, as do nearly
    one in 10 millennials (aged 27 to 42).”

    Only 1% of those in the Silent Generation, the youngest of whom are in
    their late 70s, identified as LGBTQ.

    Related stories:
    Support for same-sex marriage and LGBTQ protections dipped in 2023,
    survey shows
    Nearly 70% of LGBTQ likely voters prefer Biden over Trump, GLAAD poll finds Hannah Gadsby says Netflix’s ‘Gender Agenda’ is a comedy special for the gays
    Kristen Stewart and her ‘Love Lies Bleeding’ co-star on bringing lesbian sex to the cinema
    Since Gallup started measuring the U.S. LGBTQ population in 2012, when
    3.5% of respondents identified as part of the community, there has been
    a consistent increase. Jones expects the trend to continue.

    “Sometime in the next 10 to 30 years, we’ll hit 10%,” he said.

    How soon that happens, he added, depends partly on the life span of
    those in the Silent Generation, who are the least likely to identify as
    LGBTQ, at just over 1%.


    Brooke Sopelsa
    Brooke Sopelsa is the editorial director of NBC Out, NBC News' LGBTQ
    digital destination.

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