The court's decision comes after parliament in March adopted a bill giving same-sex couples the same marriage rights as heterosexual couples.
A conservative group close to the centre-right opposition Slovenian Democratic Party (SDS) and backed by the Catholic Church had contested the law.
But Slovenia's parliament had halted the initiative in its tracks, claiming it was unconstitutional given that marriage heterosexual or gay is a basic right.
The Constitutional Court on Thursday struck down parliament's bid to prevent a popular vote.
Under Slovenian law, any group that gathers 40,000 signatures within a month's time can take a motion to referendum. Slovenia's total population is estimated at around 2 million.
Should more than 20 percent of the electorate take part in the referendum, and a majority of them vote against the law, it will eventually be scrapped.
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