Some LGBTQ+ people phone the hotline from work, fearing the abuse they’ll face from their family if they find out their identity. Others, as they listen out for the jingling of house keys, say their partner is withholding their gender-affirming medication.
![[WEEKEND: LGBT Foundation: 'One in four LGBTQ+ people have suffered domestic abuse - here's what to do / how to help']](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SEI_240427261-e64d.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
They reach out to ask a stranger if they should leave their relationship. Their partner is not a bad person, but they’re at their wit’s end. They no longer know what’s real or feel connected to their community. These people have phoned a domestic abuse hotline run by the LGBT Foundation, a queer health and wellbeing charity.
![[LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - MARCH 9: Activists participate the Million Women Rise march against violence against women in London, United Kingdom on March 09, 2024. (Photo by Loredana Sangiuliano/Anadolu via Getty Images)]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/SEI_240424637-3f28.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
‘We recently had a gay male from the travelling community who was exposed to really high levels of violence – some 40 abusive perpetrators involved,’ Tiffany Sky, the charity’s LGBTQ+ Domestic Abuse and Sexual Violence service, told Metro. ‘It was a never-ending cycle of torture, torment and physical violence.’.
![[Someone is reaching for a crystal meth pipe next to a bottle of Dalavir, an antiretroviral medication used to treat HIV, before meeting someone for a chemsex encounter at their home in Bangkok, Thailand, on July 24, 2024. Chemsex, the act of consuming chemicals to enhance sexual pleasure, is taking a deadly hold on the LGBTQ community worldwide and is thriving in Thailand's deeply ingrained societal stigmas related to sex and drug use. Even with access to HIV-prevention medication like PReP, chemsex is driving higher rates of HIV transmission, with studies showing that chemsex participants are up to five times more likely to contract HIV compared to those who do not partake. (Photo by Matt Hunt/NurPhoto via Getty Images)]](https://metro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/SEI_236270665-66d5.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=646)
Domestic violence can happen to and be perpetuated by anyone, regardless of sexuality or gender. But such cruelty might present differently among queer people, Tiffany, who has worked in domestic violence services since she was 24, said. ‘For one, there’s the threat of disclosure. A lot of clients maybe aren’t out to family, friends or colleagues and that’s used by an abusive partner to control them,’ she said.
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‘If the family aren’t aware of someone’s LGBTQ+ identity, that’s one less safety net. ‘When someone is identified as a high-risk – serious harm or death – there’s a lot of professional intervention involved which can be a real concern for the survivor as it’s another opportunity to be outed.’.
What LGBTQ+ domestic abuse survivors face can challenge the misconception that an abusive situation is only when a partner throws a punch. ‘If you have someone that’s in their first LGBTQ+ relationship, the threat by an abusive partner to isolate them can stop them ending that relationship,’ Tiffany said.
If you are experiencing domestic abuse, you are not alone. And whether you are currently coping with or have made the decision to leave, you do have options. The LGBT Foundation’s domestic abuse services are for LGBTQ+ people in Greater Manchester (Manchester, Salford, Trafford, Stockport, Tameside, Bury, Bolton, Oldham, Rochdale, and Wigan) and Liverpool who are aged 16 and above.
For any enquiries or support with making a referral:. Manchester: dasupport@lgbt.foundation. Liverpool: dasupportliverpool@lgbt.foundation. Telephone: 0345 3 30 30 30. ‘We’ve got a society that’s based on heterosexist myths about regression and violence. As a result of that, abusive partners may make the survivor think no one’s going to believe them.
‘Abusive partners give the idea that the violence is mutual, or that the survivor consents to the abuse using gaslighting techniques,’ she said, manipulation that involves making people doubt their perception of reality. Some face so-called ‘corrective rape’ – the raping of LGBTQ+ people to ‘cure’ them of their sexuality – and forced marriages.
Chemsex, the use of drugs to enhance sex, can also see people use controlling and isolating behaviours on queer partners. ‘They tell us, “I’ve been coerced into that by my abusive partner,” and then there’s been sexual assault and rape as a result,’ Tiffany said.
And abusers aren’t always partners. ‘We had one bisexual woman that presented to us who was the victim of a very serious domestic abuse and sexual violence perpetrated by male members of her family,’ said Tiffany. ‘They used corrective rape and conversion therapy, which included forms of torture, to try to heal her of her “wicked ways”.’.
Queer and trans women face not only gender-based inequities but anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination too, what campaigners often call intersectionality. Stats show these demographics are more vulnerable to sexual and intimate partner violence. One in four lesbian women have experienced domestic abuse, according to the anti-violence charity Galop.
Bisexual women are almost three times more likely than straight women to encounter domestic abuse, Safe Lives has found. While 50% more bisexual and pansexual women than lesbians experience severe violence in their relationships in their lifetimes. ‘The biggest factor is the social stigma they face,’ explained Tiffany. ‘We find bisexual women are misunderstood or dismissed, not only by heterosexual people but also by the LGBTQ+ community. They feel isolated and have fewer places to turn to.’.
Over time, this can chip away at a queer woman’s mental well-being, making it even more difficult for them to recognise their experiences as domestic abuse. ‘If they’re feeling isolated and they haven’t got that support network around them to keep them going, they will become stuck in those unsafe situations,’ Tiffany said.