
Amsterdam has marked the 25th anniversary of marriage equality in the Netherlands with a symbolic new ceremony at city hall, recalling the historic night of April 1, 2001 when the country became the first in the world to open marriage to same-sex couples.
According to OUTtv, the anniversary event took place shortly after midnight on April 1, 2026, when three couples again exchanged vows at Amsterdam city hall. Mayor Femke Halsema officiated, with Prime Minister Rob Jetten present as part of the commemoration.
The ceremony was designed to echo the original breakthrough moment, when then-mayor Job Cohen presided over the first same-sex marriages in Amsterdam as the world watched. In the weeks that followed, hundreds more couples married under the new law.
A quarter-century later, the anniversary serves both as a local civic milestone and as a reminder of the global reach of marriage equality since 2001. Same-sex marriage is now legal in nearly 40 countries across multiple regions, but its uneven availability also underscores how contested LGBTQ rights remain in many parts of the world.
For Amsterdam, the anniversary was not only a celebration of legal history, but also a reaffirmation of how symbolic acts of equality can reshape private lives and public culture far beyond one city.