Your family tree could hold the key to opening a path to second citizenship for you and your family, especially in Europe. There, several countries will grant citizenship to you based on ancestry. These include Poland, Italy, Ireland, Lithuania, and and Greece.
Since January 2011, Hungary was added to that list. A national law was introduced that confers citizenship on any person who was formerly a Hungarian citizen or, more importantly, anyone who is a descendant of a person who was a Hungarian citizen before 1920. The law does not require that the applicant live in Hungary, but they must show they can speak Hungarian.
In the first six months after the law took effect, more than 120,000 applications were filed and 20,000 people were granted citizenship, mostly from neighboring countries Romania, Serbia and Ukraine.
The new law is consistent with Hungarian nationality law that is based on the principles of jus sanguinis, or the blood of ancestors. Citizenship is acquired mainly on the basis of a Hungarian parent or by naturalization.
The 2011 Hungarian Citizenship law allows a simplified naturalization for those able to prove knowledge of the Hungarian language and evidence of Hungarian ancestry such as the birth certificate of a Hungarian parent or grandparent. But, as non-residents, they will not be entitled to vote in Hungarian elections. Dual citizenship is permitted.
There are around 10 million Hungarian citizens living today, and you may be eligible to become one of them.
Significant groups of people with Hungarian ancestry live across the world—over 1.6 million of them in the United States, others in Germany, the United Kingdom, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Canada and Australia.
U.S. Census records show that from 1890 to 1920, over 18.2 million immigrants from Europe came to America. In the first decade of that period, 14.5% of those folks were from Hungary…in the second decade it was 24.4%…and from 1910 to 1920, 18.2%. By 1920, 3.1% of all the U.S. urban population was Hungarian.
Those numbers mean that, today, many Americans may be eligible for Hungarian citizenship—if they just take the time to research and find proof of their ancestors’ origins.
The law highlights what has always been the easiest and quickest path toward second citizenship and a second passport—using rights established by countries with laws that grant citizenship based on your parents, grandparents or other ancestors.
For example, 40 million U.S. citizens—nearly 12% of the population—can trace their ancestry to Ireland. If they can prove that a parent or grandparent was an Irish citizen, they too can obtain an Irish passport and citizenship—and thousands have. Likewise, of the 31.8 million Americans of Mexican origin, many are eligible for dual U.S.-Mexican citizenship.
So why would you want a second passport? For many reasons. A second passport can give you access to residence options, business opportunities and investment channels not available to U.S. citizens. And it gives you the option to live elsewhere in the future, should you ever want or need to.
Know your family roots, and understand the laws of your ancestral origins to see if you may qualify for citizenship.