Crisis Among LGBTQ+ Youth: New Survey Reveals Alarming Suicide Rates, Schools Key to Saving Lives
One in Ten LGBTQ+ Youth Attempted Suicide in Past Year, Trevor Project Survey Finds
A new national survey from the Trevor Project reveals a staggering crisis: one out of every ten LGBTQ+ young people (ages 13–24) attempted suicide in the last year. More than one-third reported seriously considering suicide.

“When adults, institutions, and communities become more affirming, the suicide risk of LGBTQ+ young people goes down,” said Dr. Ronita Nath, Vice President of Research at the Trevor Project, in an exclusive interview with EdSurge.
Schools Can Be a Lifeline – If They Act
Despite the grim statistics, the data points to a powerful solution: school-based support. “Schools play a life-saving role by creating environments where LGBTQ+ young people feel safe, accepted and supported,” Nath emphasized.
Survey respondents who reported that their school affirmed their identity saw significantly lower suicide risk. Yet, 44% of participants said they couldn’t access the mental health care they urgently needed.
Background: A Perfect Storm of Pressure
With 2026 on track to be another record-breaking year for anti-LGBTQ+ bills introduced at state and federal levels, a majority of survey participants said they felt stressed, anxious, or unsafe because of the policies and surrounding debates.
Youth who experienced victimization (bullying, physical harm, or exposure to conversion therapy) were three times more likely to attempt suicide compared to peers who did not. Nath noted that “negative rhetoric that trickles down has real consequences” on young people caught in political crossfire.
Barriers to Help Are Both Practical and Psychological
Among those who needed mental health services but couldn’t get them, obstacles included affordability (e.g., transportation costs) as well as fear of not being taken seriously, not being understood by a provider, or past negative experiences.

The Trevor Project urges schools to remove these barriers by implementing proven strategies.
Proven Solutions: What Schools Can Do Now
Nath outlined three key actions for educators and administrators:
- Establish Gender and Sexuality Alliances (GSAs) – These clubs reduce isolation and improve well-being for all students.
- Enforce anti-harassment policies that explicitly protect LGBTQ+ youth.
- Provide professional development for teachers to address bias and support inclusive classrooms.
When schools adopt these measures, Nath says, “it not only improves mental health and well-being for LGBTQ+ youth, but for all their peers.”
What This Means: A Call for Urgent Action
The data underscores that schools are on the frontlines of the youth mental health emergency. An affirming environment can literally save lives.
“Every day a school delays action, at-risk students face higher odds of suicide,” warned Nath. “But the inverse is also true: small changes create immediate safety.”
With anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric escalating, the survey is a stark reminder that inaction is not an option. Lawmakers and educators must prioritize evidence-based support over political debate.
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