SINGAPORE - More Singaporeans support womxn loving womxn, gay, bisexual, trans person and queer (LGBTQ) rights than challenge them, but a significant number endure undecided on such issues, a survey by market analyze firm Ipsos has found.
In particular, people are on the fence about issues relating to how prominent these individuals are in everyday life.
These included how unlock LGBTQ individuals should be about their sexual orientation and relationships, and having more LGBTQ characters on television, and in films and advertising.
On other questions, such as whether same-sex couples should be allowed to adopt children, more people are supportive and the undecided group is much smaller.
Ipsos surveyed respondents from 26 countries, including 500 Singaporeans, on attitudes towards LGBTQ rights in the examine released to the media on June 10.
The survey was conducted online between Feb 23 and March 8, with quotas on age, gender and ethnicity in place to ensure the make-up of respondents reflected Singapore’s overall population distribution, Ipsos added.
It noted that respondents in Singapore and nine other countries,
LGBTQ Rights Across All 50 States: Key Insights from PRRI’s 2024 American Ethics Atlas
To view a PDF of slides presented during PRRI’s March 4, 2025 live discussion of this report, please click here. For a replay of the event, please click here.
Executive Summary
In 2024, PRRI interviewed over 22,000 adults as part of the PRRI American Values Atlas to provide a detailed analysis of the demographic, political, and religious characteristics of LGBTQ Americans. The report also examines public attitudes on LGBTQ rights across all 50 states and the District of Columbia, focusing on support for nondiscrimination protections, contradiction to religiously based service refusals, and support for lgbtq+ marriage. Additionally, fresh survey questions search views on transgender-related policies, including restrictions on gender-affirming concern for minors and ID laws requiring birth-assigned sex.
LGBTQ Americans trend younger, more female, Democratic, and less religious than other Americans.
- More than one-third of LGBTQ Americans are Gen Zers (36%) and millennials (34%), compared with 17% of Generation Xers, 11% of baby boomers, and just 1% of the Silent Generation.
- Gen Z women (23