If your family tree has German roots, your path to a German passport may already be open.
Germany recognizes citizenship by descent, known legally as jus sanguinis. This means that German citizenship can pass from parent to child across generations, regardless of where those children were born. But the rules have changed several times over the decades, and whether citizenship passed to you depends on when you were born, whether your parents were married, and which parent held German citizenship. A case that looks straightforward on the surface can turn on a single date or a single document.
We untangle that for you.
If you were born before this date to married parents, you can only inherit German citizenship from your father.
If you were born on or after that date, you inherit citizenship from either parent equally, meaning you could inherit citizenship from either a German father or mother.
It is possible to claim German citizenship through a grandparent, but only if citizenship passed uninterrupted down the line, e.g. from grandparent to parent, and from parent to you. If the chain was broken at any point (for instance, because your parent was ineligible under the laws in effect at the time of their birth, or because your parent became a citizen of another country before your birth), then citizenship did not pass to you through that line. This is one of the most common points of confusion we see, and one of the most important things to assess early.
In theory, German citizenship by descent has no generational limit. If citizenship passed uninterrupted from each ancestor to the next child under the laws in effect at the time of each birth, it can travel through great-grandparents, great-great-grandparents, and beyond. There is no cutoff point built into German law that says citizenship expires after a certain number of generations.
In practice, the further back the line goes, the more likely it is that a break occurred somewhere, e.g. by a mother who couldn’t pass citizenship before 1975, an unmarried father before 1993, a naturalization that severed the chain, or by a pre-1904 emigration from Germany. But we have seen qualifying lines that stretch back further than clients ever expected. The only way to know is to look.
Germany has taken significant steps to restore citizenship to those whose ancestors lost it unjustly. Two distinct tracks exist, and eligibility for each depends on your family’s specific history.
Under Article 116(2) of the German Basic Law, persons who were stripped of their German citizenship by the Nazi regime (and their descendants) are entitled to reclaim it. This includes Jewish Germans who fled persecution between January 30, 1933 and May 8, 1945, as well as those who were formally denaturalized by the regime. Citizenship in this category is reclaimed through a declaration process and does not require renunciation of your existing citizenship.
Prior to 1975, German citizenship law treated men and women unequally in ways that cut off citizenship for many descendants. You may qualify to reclaim citizenship on this basis if any of the following apply to your family history:
Legislation passed in August 2021 expanded access to citizenship restoration for those affected by gender-based discrimination, and we assess each case against both the original law and the expanded provisions.
Comprehensive review of your German ancestry and qualification
Obtain vital records from German and local archives
Professional preparation of your citizenship application package
File with German authorities and manage throughout processing