Friday, May 17, 2024

Loss of citizenship in EU member states between 2008 and 2015

The Eurostat citizenship statistics provides a very interesting glimpse into the loss of citizenship in the European union. Between 2008 and 2015  about  29,384  citizenships have been lost/revoked in the EU for various reasons, with two countries Croatia and Lithuania on the top of the list.

Croatia joined the European Union as its 28th member state on 1 July 2013.  United Kingdom in third place for stripping citizenships. Citizenship in EU member states can be lost/revoked for several reasons such as dual citizenship restrictions, fraud, treason, threat to the country and voluntarily giving up.

EU citizenship loss
Source: Eurostat
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Total
Croatia 1,694 1,352 1,231 1,442 1,051 537 264 287 7858
Lithuania 835 878 580 614 440 431 800 606 5184
United Kingdom 585 567 596 491 604 598 609 426 4476
Denmark 359 404 417 291 308 346 470 399 2994
Netherlands 293 291 361 355 440 : : 164 1904
Slovakia 182 182 260 351 334 : 278 264 1851
Poland 428 281 354 310 315 95 22 21 1826
Bulgaria 194 140 : : : 238 155 374 1101
Estonia 29 115 123 101 119 145 184 143 959
Belgium 73 59 43 54 55 41 49 44 418
Slovenia 31 32 13 35 37 23 31 29 231
Ireland 0 32 24 30 32 38 : 34 190
Romania : 119 : : : : : : 119
Greece 7 45 27 20 : : : : 99
France 45 : : : : : : : 45
Sweden 0 3 5 2 6 6 3 4 29

According to European Parliament, Citizenship describes a legal bond between a person and a state.

Citizenship is a complex legal and socio-political concept with three major components:

  • legal status,
  • rights and obligations, and
  • national identity.

The most important citizenship rights are the right to vote in and to stand in elections, the right to return to one’s country of citizenship and the right to seek diplomatic protection while abroad.

Dual citizenship accepted in EU member states through naturalisation

Involuntary loss of citizenship

Citizenship laws provide for a variety of grounds for the involuntary loss of citizenship. The most important of these are: maintaining residence abroad, voluntarily acquiring another citizenship, taking up service in a foreign army or rendering services to foreign countries, committing acts of disloyalty or treason, and acquiring citizenship fraudulently.

All EU countries, except for Croatia, Poland and Sweden, provide for the withdrawal of citizenship in cases of discovered fraud in the acquisition of citizenship (see Figure 5).

loss of citizenship
Major reasons for involuntary loss of citizenship in EU
  • In 12 EU countries, persons can be deprived of citizenship if they take service in a foreign army.
  • Prolonged residence abroad is grounds for the involuntary loss of citizenship in 10 EU countries. However, in Cyprus, Ireland and Malta, this applies only to naturalised citizens, whereas in Belgium, Denmark, Spain and Sweden it only concerns citizens who were born abroad.
  • The acquisition of another citizenship can lead to the withdrawal of citizenship in nine EU countries: Austria, Estonia, Germany, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Slovakia and Spain.
  • In 15 EU countries, citizenship can be revoked on grounds of treason or disloyalty. The actions covered by these grounds include: committing serious crimes against the country (Belgium, Bulgaria, Denmark and the Netherlands); acting against a country’s constitutional order and institutions (Denmark, Estonia, France, Latvia and Lithuania); showing disloyalty by act or speech (Cyprus, Malta and Ireland); and, more generally, acting against national interests (Greece, France, Romania, Slovenia and the UK).
  • In Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Estonia, France, Ireland, Lithuania and Malta, these grounds for revocation apply only to naturalised citizens.
  • Involvement in terrorist activities are explicitly mentioned as reasons for withdrawal of citizenship in France and the Netherlands.
Citizenship test requirement in EU-28 member states

Deprivation of citizenship 

Recent terrorist attacks on European soil and the subsequent intensification of security concerns among citizens and policy-makers have pushed a number of states to reactivate and expand legal provisions on deprivation of citizenship

The United Kingdom gradually expanded the grounds for deprivation of citizenship. Whereas before 2006, deprivation of citizenship was triggered by acting against the UK’s ‘vital interest’, after 2006 the Secretary of State can withdraw citizenship if this is ‘conducive to the public good’. According to the UK Home Office, between 2006 and 2014, 27 deprivation orders were issued on grounds that they were conducive to the public good.

In response to the terrorist attacks on Paris in November 2015, the French president proposed a revision of the constitution to allow the government to withdraw citizenship from French citizens by birth if they engaged in terrorist activities.  The proposal was later abandoned.

A similar proposal was discussed and rejected in Sweden in January 2016.

In January 2015, the Belgian government proposed a 12-point antiterrorism package, which included a provision to remove the Belgian citizenship of naturalised dual nationals who have been sentenced to more than five years in prison for a terrorism offence.

Acquisition of Citizenship

In 2016, 994 800 people obtained citizenship of an EU-28 Member State. The top five citizenship-granting countries accounted for 74 % of new citizenships granted in the EU in 2016: Italy (201 600 or 20 %), Spain (150 900 or 15 %), the United Kingdom (149 400 or 15 %), France (119 200 or 12 %) and Germany (112 800 or 11 %).

Acquisition of citizenship
Five main EU member states granting citizenship

Brexit

As a result of the Withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union, the opinion of both the European and British governments has been that British citizens would lose their European citizenship and European citizens would lose their automatic right to stay in the UK. To account for the problems arising from this, a provisional agreement outlines the right of UK citizens to remain in the EU (and vice versa) where they are resident in the Union on the day of the UK’s withdrawal. The only exception to this is citizens who possess dual citizenship with an EU state. This eligibility includes the majority of British citizens from Northern Ireland, who are automatically entitled to Irish citizenship as part of the Good Friday Agreement

The UK Government and EU have reached an agreement on the arrangements for EU citizens arriving in the UK and UK nationals arriving in the EU during the implementation period. These include the terms on which EU citizens will be able to stay here after its conclusion.

  • After UK leaves the EU in March 2019, there will be an implementation period that ends on 31 December 2020 during which EU citizens and their family members will be free to live, work and study in the UK as they do now. This will also be the case for UK nationals moving to the EU during this period.
  • EU citizens and their family members who arrive and become resident during the implementation period will be able to apply for temporary leave to remain, and after five years’ lawful residence, settled status, under the terms of the Withdrawal Agreement.
  • The rights of those EU citizens arriving during the implementation period will be safeguarded on the same terms as has been agreed for those EU citizens resident in the UK before we leave the EU. Our factsheet from December provides more detail on these rights.

Summary of Member state nationality laws

This is a summary of nationality laws for each of the twenty-eight EU member states. [Source: Wikipedia]

Member State Acquisition by birth Acquisition by descent Acquisition by marriage Acquisition by naturalisation Multiple nationality permitted
Austria Austria Persons born in Austria:
  • at least one of whose married parents is an Austrian citizen
  • out of wedlock and whose mother is Austrian citizen
  • who is foundling and is found out under the age of 6 months
Austrian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • 6 years’ residence if married for at least 5 years (and general citizenship conditions are met, including German language proficiency)
  • 6 years’ residence if born in Austria, citizen of another EEC country, granted asylum, or “exceptionally integrated”
  • depending on fulfillment of other conditions, up to 30 years’ residence
Only allowed with special permission or if dual citizenship was obtained at birth (binational parents [one Austrian, one foreign] or birth in a jus-soli country such as USA and Canada)
Belgium Belgium Persons born in Belgium who:
  • are stateless
  • are foundlings
  • lose any other nationality before 18
  • have a parent born in Belgium[citation needed]
  • have a birth or adopted parent resident in Belgium for at least 5 of the past 10 years
Belgian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • Belgian citizen father[citation needed]
Yes—after 3 years cohabitation in Belgium
  • 5 years’ residence—can petition federal government[citation needed]
  • 10 years’ residence—automatic by request at city hall[citation needed]
  • 2 years’ residence (stateless persons)
Yes
Bulgaria Bulgaria Persons born in Bulgaria who:
  • are stateless
  • are foundlings
Bulgarian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • The applicant should be at least 18 years old;
  • have permission for permanent or for long-term residence in Bulgaria since at least 3 years;
  • have not been investigated or sentenced by the Bulgarian authorities;
  • have income or occupation;
  • be able to speak and write in Bulgarian;
  • renounce previous citizenship (not applicable to citizens of the EU and EEA countries, Switzerland and countries with reciprocity agreement with Bulgaria; dual citizenship is allowed for them);
  • have marriage to Bulgarian citizen since at least 3 years and the marriage is actual.
  • The applicant should be at least 18 years old;
  • have permission for permanent or for long-term residence in Bulgaria since at least 5 years;
  • have not been investigated or sentenced by the Bulgarian authorities;
  • have income or occupation;
  • be able to speak and write in Bulgarian;
  • renounce previous citizenship (not applicable to citizens of the EU and EEA countries, Switzerland and countries with reciprocity agreement with Bulgaria; dual citizenship is allowed for them).
  • Yes – for Bulgarian citizens by birth;
  • Yes – for naturalised citizens of the EU and EEA countries, Switzerland and countries with reciprocity agreement with Bulgaria[46]
Croatia Croatia Persons born in Croatia:
  • At least one parent is a Croatian citizen
  • who is foundling (but such citizenship can be revoked if later established both parents were foreign citizens)
Croatian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:Conditions: born to Croatian parents born after March 1, 1991 and if parents are married at the time of birth, Croatian citizenship of mother the father is required should the parents happen to marry at some time after birth, citizenship is automatically granted to child retroactively. If the child is over 14 at that time, child’s consent is needed. ?
  • 8 years’ residence (can be shortened)
  • 8 years’ residence
  • sufficient knowledge of Croatian language
Yes, but persons seeking to become Croatian citizens by naturalisation are to renounce foreign citizenship unless applying by ‘privileged naturalisation’ (e.g. descendants of Croatian emigrants)
Cyprus Cyprus Persons born in Cyprus who:
  • are stateless
  • are foundlings
Cypriot nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • 3 years’ residence
  • 7 years’ residence
Yes
Czech Republic Czech Republic Persons born in the Czech Republic:
  • who are foundlings
  • whose parents are both stateless, and at least one of whom is a Czech permanent resident
No
  • Holders of a Czech permanent residence permit for at least 5 years (or 3 years for EU citizens), with real/factual residence in Czechia totalling at least half the relevant period (absences not exceeding 2 months (or 6 months for serious reasons) not being relevant)
  • Holders of a Czech permanent residence permit (at the date of the application), and lawfully resident in Czechia for 10 years, with real/factual residence in Czechia totalling at least 5 years (absences not exceeding 2 months (or 6 months for serious reasons) not being relevant)
Yes, effective January 1, 2014[47]
Denmark Denmark Persons born in Denmark who:
  • are foundlings
  • Persons who have at least one parent with Danish citizenship.
  • 6 years’ residence if married for at least 3 years
  • 9 years’ residence (holders of a permanent residence permit)
  • 8 years’ residence (refugees and stateless persons)
  • 2 years’ residence (citizens of a Nordic country, i.e. Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden)
Yes, effective September 1, 2015[48]
Estonia Estonia[49] Persons born in Estonia who:
  • are foundlings
  • Persons who have at least one parent with Estonian citizenship.
No (unless married to an Estonian citizen before 26 February 1992)
  • 8 years’ residence
Estonia does not recognize multiple citizenship. However, Estonian citizens by descent cannot be deprived of their Estonian citizenship, and are de facto allowed to have multiple citizenship.
Finland Finland Persons born in Finland who:
  • are stateless, or
  • are foundlings

(Possibility to obtain citizenship by declaration exists for inborn aliens who have lived a major part of their childhood in Finland.)

Finnish nationality is acquired by descent from a Finnish mother, and from a Finnish father under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • Minimum residence requirement of four years of residence.
  • Five years of continuous residence (or a total of seven years of residence since age 15) in Finland; and
  • knowledge of at least one of Finnish, Swedish or Finnish sign language.
  • Reductions apply under certain conditions.
Yes
France France At birth, persons born in France who:
  • Are stateless.
  • Aged 13–16, upon the parent’s request, having resided habitually in France since the age of 8.
  • Aged 16–18, upon their own request, having resided in France for 5 years (continuously or discontinuously) since the age of 11.
  • Aged 18, automatically for persons born in France, having resided in France for 5 years (continuously or discontinuously) since the age of 11.

[50]

French nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • Through parentage (right of blood):[51]
  • The child (legitimate or natural) is French if at least one parent is French.
  • 4[citation needed] years’ marriage; also, after 5[citation needed] years outside France

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Naturalisation conditions
Yes
Germany Germany Persons born in Germany, if at least one parent has resided in Germany for at least 8 years and holds a permanent residence permit German nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • Through parentage (right of blood)
  • Member of recognised historical German community abroad (e.g. in the Balkans, Kazakhstan); Also granted to children/grandchildren of those deprived of citizenship by the Nuremberg Laws
  • 2 years of marriage and 3 years of continuous residence in Germany
  • 8 years’ residence
  • 7 years’ residence (if an integration course has been completed)
  • 6 years’ residence (if especially well integrated and has a very high command of the German language, or a refugee or stateless person)[citation needed]
  • No residence (victims of Nazi persecution)
No, unless:

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Conditions
Greece Greece Persons born in Greece who:
  • have a parent born in Greece
  • are foundlings
  • are stateless
Greek nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • Member of recognised historical Greek community abroad in countries of ex-USSR
  • Ethnic Greek of different citizenship accepted to military academies, or inscribes to serve to the army, or enlists as a volunteer in time of war
  • Child or grandchild of a Greek Citizen
  • 3 years of continuous residence in Greece and has an offspring from the marriage
  • 10 years residence in the last 12 years
  • 5 years residence in the last 12 years for refugees
  • Sufficient knowledge of Greek language, Greek history, and Greek culture in general
  • Athlete of an Olympic Sport, with 5 years residence in the last 12 years, who fulfills the conditions of being a member of the Greek National Team of that sport, as these are stated by the international laws for that sport
Yes
Hungary Hungary Persons born in Hungary who:
  • are foundlings
  • are stateless
Hungarian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • At least one parent is a Hungarian citizen
  • Any person of Hungarian ethnicity, which has to be proven by
  1. sufficient level of Hungarian language
  2. demonstrating at least one ancestor born in the Kingdom of Hungary (no limit on number of generations).
Yes After 3 years
  • After 8 years and meeting conditions of good character
  • After 5 years if
    • born in Hungary
    • resided in Hungary in their pupillage
    • stateless
  • After 3 years if
    • married to a Hungarian citizen
    • has a minor child that is Hungarian citizen
    • adopted by a Hungarian citizen
    • refugee in Hungary
Yes
Republic of Ireland Ireland Persons born in Ireland:
  • are automatically an Irish citizen if he or she is not entitled to the citizenship of any other country.
  • entitled to be an Irish citizen if at least one parent is:
    • an Irish citizen (or someone entitled to be an Irish citizen).
    • a resident of the island of Ireland who is entitled to reside in either the Republic or Northern Ireland without any time limit on that residence.
    • a legal resident of the island of Ireland for three out of the 4 years preceding the child’s birth.
Irish nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • if at the time of birth, at least one parent was an Irish citizen.
  • if you have an Irish citizen grandparent born on the island of Ireland. The parent would have automatically been an Irish citizen. Grandchild can secure citizenship by registering themselves in the Foreign Births Register. Citizenship gained via the Foreign Births Register can only be passed on to children born after the parent themselves were registered.
  • 3 years of marriage or civil partnership to an Irish citizen. Three-years of residency out of the most recent five year period is required.
  • 5 years of residency in Ireland, of which 1 (one) year immediately before application
    • The residency period can be waived, in the discretion of the Minister of Justice, for a person of “Irish descent or associations”.
Yes
Italy Italy Persons born in Italy who:
  • are foundlings
  • are stateless
Italian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • 2 years of legal residence in Italy (3 years if living abroad) through naturalisation
  • 10 years’ residence, no criminal record and sufficient financial resources
  • 7 years’ residence for children adopted by Italian citizens
  • 5 years’ residence for refugees or stateless individuals
  • 4 years’ residence for EU member states nationals[52]
  • 3 years’ residence for descendants of Italian grandparents and for foreigners[citation needed] born in Italy
Yes
Latvia Latvia Persons born in Latvia who: Latvian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions: No
  • After 5 years of permanent residence
Starting from October the 1st, 2013 hereby listed persons are eligible[53] to have dual citizenship with Latvia:
  • citizens of member countries of EU, NATO and EFTA (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland)
  • citizens of Australia, Venezuela, Brazil, New Zealand
  • citizens of the counties that have had mutual recognition of dual citizenship with Latvia
  • people who were granted the dual citizenship by the Cabinet of Ministers of Latvia
  • people of Latvian or Livonian ethnicity or exiles registering citizenship of Latvia[54]
  • people who have applied for dual citizenship before the previous Latvian Citizenship law (1995).
Lithuania Lithuania Persons born in Lithuania who:
  • are stateless.
Lithuanian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • at least one parent is a Lithuanian citizen
  • at least one direct ancestor was Lithuanian citizen during the period of 1918-1940.
  • 7 years of permanent residence and demonstrating Lithuanian language ability
  • 10 years of continuous residence (plus demonstrating Lithuanian language ability, passing the Constitution exam, having no criminal record)
No
Luxembourg Luxembourg Persons born in Luxembourg who:
  • are stateless, or
  • are foundlings, or
  • have a parent born in Luxembourg
Yes3 years’ if residing outside Luxembourg and marriage to a Luxembourgish citizen. Right away, if residing in Luxembourg and marriage to a Luxembourgish citizen.
  • 5 years’ residence, including 12 months continuous residence immediately preceding the citizenship application
Yes
Malta Malta
  • Persons born in Malta between 21 September 1964 and 31 July 1989
  • Persons born outside Malta between 21 September 1964 and 31 July 1989 to a father with Maltese citizenship through birth in Malta, registration or naturalisation
  • Persons born on or after 1 August 1989, inside or outside Malta, to at least one parent with Maltese citizenship through birth in Malta, registration or naturalisation
Maltese nationality is acquired by descent under the following condition:
  • Direct descendant, second or subsequent generation, born abroad of an ascendant who was born in Malta of a parent who was also born in Malta.
Yes5 years of marriage to a Maltese citizen (if de jure or de factoseparated, then still living together five years after the marriage) or a widow/widower of a Maltese citizen five years after the marriage
  • 5 years of residence or
  • citizenship-by-investment program
Yes
Netherlands Netherlands Persons born in Netherlands who:
  • see: “Dutch by birth”
Dutch nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • Persons with a Dutch parent
  • 3 years of residence and demonstrating Dutch language ability
After 5 years uninterrupted residence, with continuous registration in the municipal register No, unless:[55][56]

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Conditions

Persons over 18 with multiple nationalities must live in the Netherlands or the EU for at least one year out of every ten years, or receive a Dutch passport or a nationality certificate every ten years.

Poland Poland
  • A child born to a Polish parent.
  • Children born or found in Poland acquire Polish citizenship when both parents are unknown, or when their citizenship cannot be established, or if determined to be statelessness.
Polish nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
Yes
  • 3 years of residence with permanent residence permit card under the condition of speaking Polish language proven by certificate
  • 2 years of residence with permanent residence permit card acquired on the basis of marriage with Polish citizen and condition of speaking Polish language proven by certificate
  • 1 year of residence with permanent residence permit card acquired on the basis of Polish ethnicity or by possessing Pole’s Card and condition of speaking Polish language proven by certificate
  • 10 years of lawful residence (under any type of residence permit/visas) and possession of permanent residence card with condition of speaking Polish language proven by certificate
Yes but in Poland, Polish identification must be used and the dual citizen is treated legally as only Polish
Portugal Portugal A person who is not descended from a Portuguese citizen becomes a Portuguese citizen at the moment of birth, by the effect of the law itsef, if that person was born in Portugal and:
  • would otherwise be stateless
  • is a foundling
  • is born to non-citizen birth parents one of whom, at least, is resident in Portugal at the time of the birth (independently of the legality of such residency), but only if that parent resident in Portugal was also born in Portugal, and provided that such residency in Portugal is not due to service to a foreign State.

A person who is not descended from a Portuguese citizen and who is not covered by the conditions for automatic attribution of nationality by birth in Portugal set out above, has a right to declare that he or she wants to become a Portuguese citizen, and that person becomes a natural-born Portuguese citizen, with effects retroactive to the momement of birth, upon the registration of such declaration in the Portuguese Civil Registry (by application made by that person, once of age, or by a legal representative of that person, during minority), if that person was born in Portugal and:

  • had, at the date of birth, a birth parent legally resident in Portugal for at least 5 years, either enjoying Treaty rights (namely, the European Union freedom of movement, for citizens of other Member States of the Union, or the special conditions for settlement in Portugal by citizens of the Member States of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries), or in possession of any of the categories of residence permit issued by the Portuguese State, but provided that such parent’s residency in Portugal was not due to service to a foreign State.
Portuguese nationality is transmitted by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • A person married to a Portuguese national for at least 3 years can apply to be registered as a Portuguese national as a matter of right, provided that the registration is applied for during the marriage (and not after its dissolution by death or divorce). Nationality takes effect upon registration and is not retroactive, and is not lost by the dissolution of the marriage.

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Naturalisation conditions
Yes
Romania Romania Persons born in Romania who:
  • are foundlings
  • have Romanian parents
Romanian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • 5 years’ residence in Romania
  • 8 years’ residence
  • 4 years’ residence (EU citizens), but requires permanent residency which is typically issued after 5 years
Yes[57]
Slovakia Slovakia Persons born in Slovakia who: Slovak nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • After 5 years’ residence in Slovakia, and living in Slovakia without any immigration restrictions at the time of application
  • 8 years’ residence (5 years until a permanent residence is acquired plus 3 years of permanent residence)
Dual citizenship is only permitted to Slovak citizens who acquire a second citizenship by birth or through marriage; and to foreign nationals who apply for Slovak citizenship and meet the requirements of the Citizenship Act.[58][59]
Slovenia Slovenia A child born in Slovenia is a Slovenian citizen if either parent is a Slovenian citizen. Where the child is born outside Slovenia the child will be automatically Slovenian if:
  • both parents are Slovenian citizens; or
  • one parent is Slovenian and the other parent is unknown, is of unknown citizenship or is stateless.

A person born outside Slovenia with one Slovenian parent who is not Slovenian automatically may acquire Slovenian citizenship through:

  • an application for registration as a Slovenian citizen made at any time before age 36; or
  • taking up permanent residence in Slovenia before age 18.

Children adopted by Slovenian citizens may be granted Slovenian citizenship.

Slovenian nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:
  • A person of “Slovenian origin” up to the fourth generation in direct descent or a former Slovenian citizen may be naturalised without any residence requirements.
  • A person who is married to a Slovenian citizen for at least two years may be naturalised after one year’s residence in Slovenia
  • A total of 10 years residence in Slovenia, including 5 years continuous residence before the application
  • Dual citizenship is generally permitted in Slovenia, except for certain persons seeking to become Slovenian citizens by naturalisation they are to renounce any foreign citizenship (the requirement to renounce foreign citizenship may be waived upon special application).
Spain Spain Persons born in Spain who:
  • are stateless, or
  • are foundlings
  • Children of Spanish citizens
  • 1[60] year of marriage to a Spanish citizen and residence in Spain
  • 10 years’ residence
  • 5 years’ residence (refugees)
  • 2 years’ residence (for nationals of Iberoamerica, Andorra, Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal, or if the individual is a Sephardi Jew)
  • 1 year’s residence (persons born in Spain)
  • Yes (if a Spanish citizen by descent/origin); if naturalising in an Iberoamerican country, Spanish—and EU citizenship—is “dormant” until the return to Spain; see Multiple citizenship.
  • No (if a naturalised Spanish citizen, unless from Iberoamerica, Andorra, Philippines, Equatorial Guineaor Portugal)
Sweden Sweden[61] Persons born in Sweden who:
  • are stateless, or
  • are foundlings (cancelled if parents found)
Swedish nationality is acquired by descent under one of the following conditions:

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Conditions
  • 3 years’ marriage in case residing in Sweden, 10 years in case living abroad with a Swedish spouse and has ‘strong ties’ to Sweden, by family visits and such
  • 5 years normal residence permit (not the time limited residence/work permit/Study Permit) and must hold Swedish permanent residence permit at the time of applying or person with a visa intended for settlement in Sweden with 5 years residence in Sweden.
  • 2 years if citizen of a Nordic country (i.e. Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Norway)[62]
Yes
United Kingdom United Kingdom Persons born in United Kingdom who are “British by birth” (see separate article) British nationality is acquired by descent under one of several conditions. See separate article section of “British by descent” for details.
  • 3 years’ residence (must be without any immigration restrictions on date of application)[63]
  • 5 years’ continuous residence, with at least 12 months’ residence without any conditions (the last year of which without any immigration restrictions, i.e. Indefinite Leave to Remain or permanent residence as an EU citizen)[63]
Yes
Prabhu Balakrishnan
Prabhu Balakrishnan
Founder of Citizenship by Investment Journal. Chief Editor with over 15 years experience in PR and News publishing. He Loves writing about citizenship, residency and wealth migration. CIP Journal is a Leading publication founded in 2017 bringing latest news from CBI/RBI market.

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