Overjoyed Dylan Mulvaney films herself changing her passport’s gender marker from male to female… before trans influencer poses TOPLESS in wooded area

Transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney has finally changed the gender on her passport from male to female.

Despite coming out as transgender in March 2022 and becoming famous for documenting her transition, Mulvaney was still using a year-old passport.

Mulvaney, 27, showed her 10 million TikTok followers her passport photo when she still had masculine facial features and short brown hair.

She explained that she had a male passport for so long because it had to be sent for “weeks or months” to be changed and she travels so much for work.

Dylan Mulvaney, 27, showed her 10 million TikTok followers her passport photo when she still had masculine facial features and short brown hair (left) compared to her new one (right)

The transgender influencer eventually changed the gender on her passport from male to female

However, it became increasingly difficult to use as the radical difference between her appendage and the passport photo confused immigration officials.

“They don't always think I'm the same person that's in my passport… they wonder, who are you and what have you done with old Dylan,” she said.

This was made worse after he underwent facial feminization surgery earlier this year, which caused the shape of her face to deviate even further from the male passport photo.

Mulvaney filmed himself as a new passport photo was taken and marveled at how it turned out well – unlike most official photos.

She then compared it to her old passport, believed to be the first time she revealed the years-old photo on social media.

“I want to thank the U.S. government for allowing me to do this,” she said, pointing to the F next to gender on the new passport.

'And for all those people [who] called me a man, well, you can discuss that with the Ministry of Social Security, because my passport says otherwise.'

Mulvaney later documented a road trip with friends to a woods retreat, where she posed nude in an outdoor pool wearing only a red cap.

In other photos, she was seen in a fluffy pink dress and other flashy winter-themed outfits with her friends.

Mulvaney later documented a road trip with friends to a woods retreat, where she posed nude in an outdoor pool wearing only a red cap.

In other photos, she was seen in a fluffy pink dress and other flashy winter-themed outfits with her friends

Another photo of Mulvaney posing nude during her recent vacation in the woods

Mulvaney also wore this bizarre outfit while relaxing in a wooden hut

Mulvaney became phenomenally popular on TikTok for documenting her transition, but is now best known for her controversial Bud Light promotion.

The brewing giant created a limited edition Bud Light can with her face to celebrate 365 days of being a girl, the phrase she uses to describe her transition

Mulvaney teamed up with the brand in April for the March Madness NCAA campaign and posted a video holding the can on April 1.

Despite the cans being produced in extremely limited quantities and only featured in one video, conservative figures were outraged and called for a boycott.

The setback caused Bud Light's parent company, Anheuser-Busch, to lose $400 million in sales, with U.S. sales down 10.5 percent from the year before.

Mulvaney became phenomenally popular on TikTok for documenting her transition, but is now best known for her controversial Bud Light promotion

The setback caused Bud Light's parent company Anheuser-Busch to lose $400 million in sales, while U.S. sales fell

Mulvaney condemned Bud Light, which she didn't mention in any response to the backlash, for not being supportive.

“For a company to hire a trans person and then not publicly support them is worse, in my opinion, than not hiring a trans person at all,” she previously told The Cut.

Describing herself as a “sacrificial lamb in the election landscape,” she added that the whole fiasco was a “wake-up call” and that she became “a more realistic person.”

Mulvaney then posted a TikTok video saying she was “afraid to leave the house” at the height of the backlash.

Bud Light employees accused their company's leadership of “cowardice” over the advertising fiasco, arguing that they should have been more supportive of Mulvaney.

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