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On Jan. 28-29, 2026 France's National Assembly unanimously approved a cross-party bill that would erase any legal ambiguity that marriage creates an obligation to have sex.
Backed by more than 120 MPs and co-authored by Green MP Marie-Charlotte Garin and Horizons MP Paul Christophe, the text amends the Civil Code to specify that cohabitation “creates no obligation for the spouses to have sexual relations.” The measure would also prevent lack of sexual relations being used as grounds for fault-based divorce and would require registrars to read a clarifying statement at weddings.
The bill now moves to the Senate under an accelerated procedure; if passed without amendment it could become law by summer 2026.
Supporters say the change aligns civil law with recent criminal-law reforms — including the 2025 adoption of consent into the legal definition of rape — and follows a 2025 European Court of Human Rights ruling that refusal of sex cannot be treated as fault in divorce.
Campaigners argue the reform is aimed at deterring marital rape and removing archaic interpretations that have affected court rulings in recent years.
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