ONE in 20 people in Shropshire aged under 35 years old identify with an LGBT+ sexual orientation, new census figures show.

Stonewall said the latest census breakdown shows that with each passing generation, more people feel safer coming out as LGBT+, living as their true selves.

The census data shows 1,605 people aged between 16 and 24 years old in Shropshire said they identified with a sexuality other than heterosexual when the census took place in March 2021, alongside 1,745 aged 25 to 34.

It means about 5.3 per cent of those aged under 35 in Shropshire said they identified with an LGBT+ sexuality.

Across England and Wales, the majority of LGB+ people were aged between 16 and 34 years (57.9 per cent), with about 6.2 per cent of the age group identifying with minority sexuality.

The category LGBT+ covers people identifying as lesbian, gay or bisexual, as well as pansexual, asexual, queer or any other sexual orientation apart from heterosexual.

Additionally, the data shows females in Shropshire were more likely to identify with a minority sexuality – with 3,525 saying they were not straight compared to 2,785 males.

Nationally, 830,000 females (3.3 per cent) identified with an LGB+ sexual orientation compared to 706,000 males (three per cent).

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The census also asked people, for the first time, about their gender identity. In Shropshire, 780 (0.3 per cent) people said they did not identify with the gender assigned to them at birth.

The figures show 225 people aged 16 to 24 years said they were transgender – accounting for 28.8 per cent of the trans community in the area.

In England and Wales, people aged 16 to 24 years old were the most likely age group to have said their gender identity was different from their sex registered at birth.

About one per cent of the younger age cohort said they were trans, followed by 0.8 per cent of people aged between 24 and 34 and 0.6 per cent of people aged 35 to 44 years old.

Stonewall said: "Following the initial data showing over 1.5 million lesbian, gay and bi people living in England and Wales, we now see that younger generations feel safer to be themselves.

"Each generation reports more lesbian, gay and bi people than the last – but that doesn’t necessarily mean there are now simply more of us. It suggests that older generations were not always safe or free to speak about their experiences, or lacked the language to describe them."

The charity added the data is a reminder to leaders, institutions and governments to champion the LGBT+ community.