[1] In 2019, the group was involved in helping draft a new law on legal gender recognition in Iceland, replacing the medicalised system with one based on statutory declaration and allowing individuals to choose a third gender option known as "X" on official documents.
[8] That year, the group's chairperson, Owl Fisher was named one of the BBC's 100 Women.
[9] In January 2020, the group was awarded a 500,000 ISK grant from the City of Reykjavík's Gunnar Thoroddsen Memorial Fund for humanitarian work.
[11] In December 2020, Trans Ísland was unanimously granted status as a member association of the IWRA.
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