A Trans/Latine Journey Through Language and Legacy
Latine Heritage Month or Latinx Heritage Month or National Hispanic Heritage Month can elicit a range of responses for trans, non-binary, and gender non-conforming (TNBGNC) individuals of Latin American and Hispanic descent. For some, it is a time of cultural pride and celebration. For others, it is a reminder of inherited trauma, ongoing marginalization, and systems that continue to erase or oversimplify intersectional identities.
Whatever your relationship to this month, whether celebratory, critical, or evolving, your experiences are valid. This guide was created with trans and gender-expansive Latine people in mind, offering both context and resources to support you during this time and beyond.
- Understanding the Origins of the Term “Hispanic”
- Latino, Latinx, Latine: A Critical Distinction
- Why the Term “Hispanic” Remains Controversial and Harmful
- Why Latinx and Latine Language Matters for Trans Communities
- Affirming Ways to Celebrate and Honor Latine Heritage Month as a TNBGNC Person
- Resources for Thriving as a TNBGNC/Latine Individual
Understanding the Origins of the Term “Hispanic”
The term Hispanic did not emerge organically from our communities. Instead, it was established in 1977 by the U. S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) as part of a federal effort to standardize racial and ethnic data collection. The OMB defined Hispanic as referring to individuals with “Spanish culture or origin,” regardless of race.
This classification grouped people from over 30 nations into a single, bureaucratic category, even though each one has distinct histories, languages, and racial compositions. It erased Indigenous, Black, Afro-Latinx, Asian-Latinx, and gender-expansive identities. Moreover, it served to depoliticize the radical organizing of the Chicano Movement by replacing its cultural nationalism with a more assimilationist, state-sanctioned identity.
Today, many still select the Hispanic category on official forms because many systems (e.g. education, healthcare, employment) provide no alternatives.
Latino, Latinx, Latine: A Critical Distinction
It is important to understand the distinctions between commonly used terms:
- Hispanic refers to individuals from Spanish-speaking countries, including Spain
- Latino (or Latina) typically refers to people from Latin America, and does not include Spain
- Latinx and Latine are gender-inclusive alternatives to Latino/Latina, created to expand beyond the binary present in Spanish language.
The need for inclusive language arises from the reality that Spanish often excludes or misgenders trans, non-binary, and gender non-conforming people. Latinx, which is more common in the U.S., and Latine, which is increasingly used in Spanish-speaking communities, offer alternatives that affirm and reflect gender diversity.
Both are valid, and you should use what aligns with your identity and lived experience.
Why the Term “Hispanic” Remains Controversial and Harmful
While still widely used across government, academia, and media, the term Hispanic continues to generate concern, particularly about TNBGNC members of Latine communities.
Its usage carries significant implications:
- It is not a racial category, but it is often treated as one which flattens cultural and ethnic differences into a single, state-approved label
- It centers Spain and colonial legacies, marginalizing Afro-Latinx, Indigenous, and Caribbean lineages
- It has been used historically to tokenize or erase queer and trans voices, reducing visibility rather than expanding it
- It reinforces a whitewashed, cis-normative narrative that fails to reflect the plurality of Latinx/Latine identities and experiences
Despite these concerns, many will still use the term strategically because Hispanic remains the default on most official forms. For many, it is a term of necessity rather than choice as individuals often have no meaningful alternative if they wish to access education, employment, healthcare, or house.
This reflects a broader issue: the bureaucracy of erasure.
Institutional systems in the U.S., which includes schools, hospitals, workplaces, and government agencies, continue to rely on outdated and incomplete demographic categories.
These systems rarely:
- Offer Latinx/Latine as an option
- Allow for self-identification beyond binary gender categories
- Include recognition of Afro-Latinx, Asian-Latinx, or Indigenous heritage
- Collect or respect gender identity, pronouns, or chosen names
For TNBGNC Latine individuals, this systemic invisibility has real consequences. It can restrict access to gender-affirming care, compromise safety, and limit access to culturally competent services. The forms we are required to fill out rarely reflect the fullness and intersectionality of who we are.
Why Latinx and Latine Language Matters for Trans Communities
Using gender-inclusive language is not about political correctness. It is a matter of survival, visibility, and cultural affirmation. As Dr. María R. Scharrón-del Río, a queer Puerto Rican psychologist, has said, “Language is an intervention tool—it saves lives.”
The usage of Latinx or Latine:
- Disrupts binary gender norms
- Acknowledges and centers trans, non-binary, and gender non-conforming individuals
- Reflects a commitment to liberation rather than simply representation
By using these terms, we can insist that gender-diverse people not only exist within our cultures, but that they have always existed.

Affirming Ways to Celebrate and Honor Latine Heritage Month as a TNBGNC Person
Whether you observe this month as Latinx Heritage Month, Latine Heritage Month, or Hispanic Heritage Month, you have the right to define your relationship to this time in ways that honor your truth and lived experience.
Some ways could include:
- Studying the lives and legacies of trans and queer Latin American elders
- Creating or sharing art, poetry, or music that reflects both gender and cultural identity
- Hosting or attending events rooted in queer cultural storytelling and mutual aid
- Sharing your story publicly or privately, on your own terms
- Holding intentional conversations with chosen family about identity, language, and liberation
In Solidarity and Community
There is no single way to be Latinx, Latine, or TNBGNC. You do not need to speak Spanish, “pass,” or fit into externally defined categories to claim your heritage and your identity.
This month, and every month, you are entitled to:
- Be fully seen and affirmed
- Celebrate your lineage without compromise
- Experience joy, safety, and healing
Systems may attempt to reduce us to checkboxes. But our lives and our histories refuse to be contained. This month may not have been designed with TNBGNC people in mind, but we are here. We have always been here. And we are building something better together.
Whether you are navigating systems, challenging norms, or simply existing in your truth: You are not alone. You are loved. You are powerful.
Resources for Thriving as a TNBGNC/Latine Individual
Organizational & Community Support
- Latino LinQ / Poder Unides: Trans+ / Community Estrella (Atlanta)
- CALOR (Chicago)
- Organización Latina Trans in Texas (Houston)
- Translatinx Network (New York City)
- Sylvia Rivera Law Project (New York City
- Trans-Latinx DMV (Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia)
- QLatix – Gender Justice Initiative (Orlando)
- TransFamily Support Services – Latinx Branch (San Diego)
- El/La Para TransLatinas (San Francisco Bay Area)
- TransLatin@ Coalition
- Trans Student Educational Resources
- Trans Legal Aid Clinic of Texas
- Transgender Law Center
- Advocates for Trans Equality
Health, Mental Health, & Resource Directories
- OutCare Health
- Translate Gender
- Trans Health HQ
- Latinx Therapists Action Network
- La Clínica del Pueblo (Washington, D.C. area)
- WPATH
- Montrose Center (Houston)
- National Queer and Trans Therapists of Color Network
- Inclusive Therapy Group
- USCF Alliance Health Project (San Francisco Bay area)
Clothing, Basic Needs, & Mutual Aid
- Point of Pride
- Stand with Trans
- Familia TQLM
- Out of the Closet: TMN Services Network (Atlanta)
- Margie’s Closet (Ohio)
- Transpire Oklahoma (Oklahoma)
- TransPonder (Oregon)
- Genderbands (Utah; National)
- Iowa Trans Mutual Aid Fund (Iowa)
- Trans Love Fund (South Carolina)
- Rainbow Closet (Colorado)
- Transanta
Intersectional LGBTQ+ QTPoC Initiatives
- Brave Trails Resources
- Connie Norman Empowerment Center
- Marsha P. Johnson Institute
- The Okra Project
- Audre Lorde Project (New York City)
- House of GG (Southern United States)
Check your local LGBTQ+ center—most offer a multi-service directory that includes access to gender-affirming healthcare, legal aid for documentation changes, support groups, mental health services, housing assistance, and affirming clothing resources.