Resumen: From the premise of religious freedom, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) case-law has established a State duty of neutrality concerning religious matters. However, the concept of neutrality is not univocal, and the ECtHR uses various different forms of it. States have a duty to allow religious groups access to legal personality, but they are not obliged to grant every religious group the same kind of legal personality. A double or multi-level system of recognition is legitimate under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) if some conditions are fulfilled. The ECtHR has also affirmed that the most radical kind of double or multi-level system, that of an established church, is not contrary to the Convention. In a recent case, however,the ECtHR seems to have adopted a stricter approach to the legitimacy of privileges granted to some church/churches above other ones. Idioma: Inglés DOI: 10.1163/18710328-12341305 Año: 2016 Publicado en: Religion and Human Rights 11, 3 (2016), 189-223 ISSN: 1871-0328 Factor impacto SCIMAGO: 0.117 - Religious Studies (Q3) - Sociology and Political Science (Q4) - Social Sciences (miscellaneous) (Q4) - Political Science and International Relations (Q4)