
AXM was a British lifestyle digital magazine aimed at young gay and bisexual men.

Bella is a weekly magazine aimed at women, currently published in the United Kingdom by H Bauer Publishing, the UK subsidiary of the German-owned family business, the Bauer Media Group.

Bliss was a monthly British magazine aimed at 14- to 17-year-old girls, retailing at £2.75 and often coming with a gift such as make-up or a bag. The content covered candid celebrity gossip, latest fashions, hair and make-up looks, a problem page on puberty, boyfriends, friends and sex, an interview with the celebrity cover girl, entertainment reviews, romance advice, psychology for friendships, and real-life stories.

Burda Style is a fashion magazine published in 17 languages and in over 100 countries. Each issue contains patterns for every design featured that month. The magazine is published by Hubert Burda Media.

Cosmopolitan Serbia, officially Cosmopolitan Serbia & Montenegro, is the Serbian edition of women's lifestyle magazine Cosmopolitan. Its first issue was published in May 2004, featuring Mischa Barton on the cover. The headquarters of the magazine is based in Belgrade. Besides Serbia, the magazine is distributed in Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and North Macedonia.

Dancing Times is a dancing magazine based in the UK, the oldest dance magazine to be still published. The magazine helped found the Royal Academy of Dance, the Camargo Society, and the British Dance Council. Dance Today, a ballroom magazine, is a spin-off of Dancing Times.

DIVA is Europe's leading magazine targeted towards LGBTQAI+ people and non-binary people. The magazine contains features on lifestyle issues affecting young LBTQAI+ people and allies as well as political developments in the LGBTQAI+ scene. It also contains articles on travel, music and the latest cinema releases in the sector.

Gay Times, also known as Gay Times Magazine and previously as GT, is a LGBTQ media brand established in 1975. Originally beginning as a magazine for gay and bisexual men, the company now includes content for the LGBTQ community across a number of platforms - including a now quarterly print publication, a website updated daily with news and culture content, and a number of social media platforms.

Männer was a German lifestyle magazine for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, published by the German company Bruno Gmünder Verlag. Between 1989 and 2007, the magazine was published as Männer aktuell.

QX started in 1995 with the aim to create communication platforms for the LGBT-community in Sweden and Scandinavia. It is published in Swedish monthly by QX Förlag AB and is the largest magazine of its kind in the region.

Take a Break is a British women's magazine founded in 1990 and published by H Bauer UK, a subsidiary of the German Bauer Media Group on a weekly basis, with new issues released every Thursday. The current editor is Rebecca Fleming, having taken over the role after the resignation of John Dale in 2010. Dale had been editor since 1991.

Ute og hjemme was a Norwegian weekly magazine, released by Allers Familie-Journal in January 2008. The magazine was based in Oslo. Its target group was "women and their families 35 years and older". The editor was Lars Gulbrandsen. It soon faced competition from the very similar magazine Ute & Inne, and was discontinued after slightly more than a year.