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Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week 2025

17 February 2025

16–22 February is Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week, intended to celebrate and raise awareness of aromantic spectrum experience and identities.

The Aromantic Pride flag, made up of horizontal stripes of (top to bottom) dark green, pale green, white, grey and black.

Aromanticism is a romantic orientation, describing people who experience little, fluctuating or no romantic attraction. Often confused with asexuality (a lack of, little, or fluctuating sexual attraction), aromanticism describes a distinctly separate aspect of attraction and aromantic (or, informally, ‘aro’) people may identify as any sexual orientation or gender identity. 

Both asexuality and aromanticism differ from celibacy in that they are an intrinsic part of who someone is, rather than a choice, and both are subject to similar misconceptions, such as that they cannot form close or loving relationships, that they must be lonely or emotionally cold, or that there may be something medically wrong with them. 

Aromantic Awareness Spectrum Week has been held annually since 2015 during the first full week after Valentine’s Day, as a way for those in the community and allies to celebrate and raise awareness of their identity. 

Find out more

Resources and networks for students  

Resources and networks for staff 

  • UCL’s LGBTQ+ Equality Steering Group is open to all lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer staff and those interested in promoting LGBTQ+ equality at UCL, and also steers the Out@UCL staff social network.    
  • UCL’s Trans Network is for staff and mature and PhD students at UCL who identify as trans (including non-binary, genderqueer and all other identities not identical with the gender assigned at birth).  
  • The LGBTQ+ STEM network is for members of the LGBTQ+ community allies working in a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) discipline.