"Is it legal to be naked here?" almost never has a national yes/no answer. The rule that matters is usually local: a specific beach, a licensed resort, a municipal by-law. Below is a traveller's map of the broad patterns, followed by the sources you should actually check.
Europe — the naturist heartland
Naturism is mainstream and legal in designated areas across France, Spain, Germany, the Netherlands, Croatia, Greece and Portugal, among others. France runs the world's largest naturist resorts; Germany's FKK ("free body culture") tradition is woven into public life. The key is "designated": nudity is for naturist beaches and resorts, not arbitrary public places. See our Europe beaches guide.
The Americas
The United States is a patchwork — legal at established clothing-optional beaches and private clubs, but governed state-by-state and city-by-city, with public-nudity statutes elsewhere. Canada permits it at recognised naturist beaches. Parts of Latin America and the Caribbean have specific legal naturist beaches and resorts; elsewhere it's restricted.
Asia — mostly restricted
Public nudity is illegal across most of Asia, including mainland China, and can carry public-order penalties. There are limited exceptions at some private international resorts (for example, certain adults-only or clothing-optional resorts in parts of Southeast Asia) — but these are venue-specific, not a general right. For the mainland in particular, see our China guide. [verify per destination]
Middle East & conservative jurisdictions
Public nudity is strictly illegal and can bring severe penalties across the Middle East and many conservative jurisdictions. This is not a place to test boundaries. Combine this with the fact that same-sex activity itself is criminalised in a number of these countries — the legal stakes are high.
How to verify before you go (use these, not blogs)
- Your government's official travel advisory for the destination — the authoritative word on local law and safety.
- National naturist federations and the international body (INF-FNI), plus national groups like British Naturism or AANR (US) — for directories of legal, recognised naturist sites.
- ILGA World's legal maps — for the status of same-sex activity, which often shapes how nudity and public conduct are policed.
- The specific beach or resort's own current rules — the most reliable source for that exact place.
Laws and enforcement change; this overview is general orientation, not legal advice. A place being "tolerated" is not the same as legal, and tolerance can end without notice. Confirm the current local position from official sources before you rely on it.
This is a sensitive, adult-oriented topic offered as cultural orientation and harm reduction — not as encouragement, legal advice, or any safety guarantee. Laws, policing and risks change constantly and vary by country and even by city; always confirm the current local situation from official sources before you travel. If you ever feel unsafe, prioritise getting to a public, populated, well-lit place.
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