
UnHerd with Freddie Sayers Deep dive: Is this the end of trans?
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Oct 15, 2025 Eric Kaufmann, a Politics Professor at the University of Buckingham, shares surprising insights about the decline in trans and queer identities among young Americans. He reveals that trans identification nearly halved since 2023, drawing on extensive data from university surveys. Their engaging discussion examines potential causes, including mental health trends post-pandemic and a shift in societal attitudes. Kaufmann also explores whether this decline indicates a reversion to previous norms in gender and sexual identities, prompting a thought-provoking dialogue on cultural shifts.
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Non-Binary Identification Peaked Then Fell
- Non-binary identification rose to a peak in 2023 then roughly halved by 2025 in multiple datasets. Kaufmann highlights a rise from ~3% to ~7% then back down to ~3–4% in the FIRE data.
Drop In 'Gateway' Identities Suggests Real Retreat
- Kaufmann argues the decline is unlikely to be explained by people privately switching to male/female answers; the reduction in the 'gateway' non-binary group indicates a shrinking pool of potential future trans-identifying individuals. He doubts the hardcore trans-identifying fraction is entirely unaffected.
Sexuality Followed A Similar Rise–Fall Pattern
- Sexual orientation trends mirrored gender trends, with a peak in non-heterosexual identification around 2023 and partial reversion by 2025. FIRE shows heterosexual share fell then rebounded toward pre-2020 levels.

