Sexual Conduct Law — Kazakhstan
Legal framework, penalties, and historical context (updated 2024–2025)
Key takeaways
Consensual adult conduct
- Adultery / sex outside marriage: not criminalised.
- LGBTQ status: consensual same-sex relations decriminalised in 1998.
- Age of consent: 16 (Criminal Code Art. 122).
Sex work & related offences
- Selling sex: generally an administrative infraction (public solicitation under Admin. Offences Art. 449).
- Brothels/pandering: criminal (e.g., Art. 309). Online brothel-keeping and promotion are explicitly covered.
Sexual offences & penalties
- Rape (Art. 120): re-classified as serious crime in 2019; 5–8 years baseline, higher for aggravations; up to life if victim <14.
- Violent sexual acts (Art. 121): severe penalties, especially against minors.
- Involving minors in prostitution (Art. 134): up to 12 years.
- Child pornography (Art. 312): criminal.
“Old punishments”?
Kazakhstan does not apply corporal or Sharia-style penalties (e.g., stoning, caning) in criminal law; public support for formal Sharia is low (about 10%).
Legal framework (Criminal Code & Administrative Code)
Core sexual-offence articles (Criminal Code)
- Art. 120 – Rape: 2019 reform toughened classification and sentencing; “rape and sexual assault have been re-classified … to serious offences” with multi-year terms and life in extreme cases involving young children.
- Art. 121 – Acts of a sexual nature using violence: very heavy penalties when victims are minors (up to life).
- Art. 122 – Sexual intercourse with a person under 16: establishes age of consent at 16.
- Art. 134 – Involving a minor in prostitution: criminalised; sanctions up to 12 years.
- Art. 309 – Organization/maintenance of brothels; pandering: criminal offence; recent updates cover online facilitation.
- Art. 312 – Child pornography offences: criminalised under cyber/IT-related provisions.
Administrative Offences (non-criminal)
- Art. 449 – “Attaching in public places”: used to fine public solicitation; a key basis for policing street sex work.
Consensual adult conduct (what is not a crime)
- Adultery: no criminal offence. A child-rights legal atlas notes that Kazakhstan’s law “does not criminalize … having sex outside of marriage or adultery.”
- Same-sex intimacy: decriminalised in 1998; human-rights reporting confirms legality though social stigma persists.
“Homosexuality was decriminalized in Kazakhstan in 1998.”
Sex work: what’s punished and how
Individual selling of sex is generally handled through administrative fines for public solicitation (not criminal). However, the state focuses criminal law on organisers and facilitators:
- Brothels/pimping (Art. 309): criminal. A 2024 update explicitly targets online brothel-keeping and promotion, closing common loopholes.
- Exploitation of minors (Art. 134): severe penalties.
- Public solicitation (Art. 449 Admin. Offences): fines; sex-worker advocates highlight due-process issues.
Recent changes criminalise “organizing or maintaining brothels … via telecommunications networks.”
Rape & sexual assault penalties (overview)
| Offence | Typical penalty range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rape (Art. 120) | ~5–8 years; 9–15 with aggravations; up to life if victim <14 | Re-classified as “serious” in 2019 reform. |
| Violent sexual acts (Art. 121) | Long custodial terms; life possible with minors | Recent amendments increased maxima. |
| Sex with person <16 (Art. 122) | Imprisonment; severity depends on circumstances | Establishes age of consent at 16. |
| Involving minors in prostitution (Art. 134) | Up to 12 years | Criminal exploitation focus. |
| Child pornography (Art. 312) | Criminal sanctions | Recognised in cybercrime mapping. |
Pornography & “moral” offences
- Child pornography: criminal (Art. 312).
- General pornography: Kazakhstan imposes criminal liability for dissemination of pornography; enforcement has included blocking sites.
- Sex outside marriage/adultery: not criminal.
Historic punishments still in force?
Unlike some states that retain corporal or religiously derived penalties for sexual conduct, Kazakhstan’s modern codes rely on imprisonment/fines. Sharia-style punishments (stoning/flogging) are not part of the penal system; public support for formal Sharia law is low (approx. 10% in older regional polling).
Historically, under Soviet Article 121 (and Kazakh SSR Art. 104), male homosexuality was criminalised. Those provisions were removed in 1997–1998 and are not applied today.
Enforcement notes & recent changes
- 2019: rape re-classified as a serious crime; sentencing escalators increased.
- 2024: explicit criminalisation of organising/promoting sexual services via the internet/telecom networks.
Practical cautions for travelers
- Expect strict enforcement of laws involving minors, exploitation, and pornography.
- Sex work venues and online facilitators are police targets; avoid involvement with organising, promoting, or hosting.
- Same-sex intimacy is legal but social attitudes vary; discretion reduces risk of harassment.
References
Equality Now. (2023). Sexual violence laws in Eurasia: Towards a consent standard.
Government of the UK. (2024, Sep 16). Kazakhstan: Guidance for victims of rape and sexual assault.
ILGA-Europe. (2024). Annual Review of the Human Rights Situation of LGBTI People in Europe & Central Asia.
ILGA World / OSCE & partners. (2010–2020). State-Sponsored Homophobia and related updates.
International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children. (2017). Kazakhstan: National child protection legislation.
Pew Research Center. (2013). Beliefs about Sharia.
Street Children Legal Atlas. (n.d.). Kazakhstan: Moral offences & CSEC liability.
Tengrinews. (2024, Sep 6). Sexual services via the Internet now punishable.
Human Rights Watch. (2015). “That’s When I Realized I Was Nobody”: LGBT in Kazakhstan.
RFE/RL. (2005/2021). Decriminalisation and social climate for LGBT people.
IDS (arch.). (n.d.). Sex work law – Kazakhstan.
Taylor & Francis (2025). Neoliberal authoritarianism … partial … (note on Art. 309 referenced).