What is citizenship by ancestry?
Citizenship by ancestry, also called citizenship by descent or jus sanguinis (Latin for “right of blood”), is the legal process of acquiring nationality through your bloodline rather than through birth on a country's soil, marriage, residence, or investment. Many countries recognize that nationality passes from parent to child across generations, which means a person born and raised abroad may still be entitled to citizenship through a parent, grandparent, or great-grandparent.
In some cases, you may be considered to have held this citizenship from birth and the citizenship by descent application does not grant you a new status so much as it confirms and registers a status you already carry in law. Once a government recognizes the claim and issues your documents, you gain the same rights as any other citizen, including the right to live, work, study, and travel on that country's passport.
Eligibility depends entirely on the country and its nationality law. Some nations allow claims to extend several generations back, while others limit transmission to one generation or impose cut-off dates, registration deadlines, or language and residence conditions. Because the rules are technical and frequently amended, confirming eligibility early is the most important step in the process.
How it differs from other routes
Citizenship by ancestry is distinct from the following paths to a second nationality:
- Naturalization: Depending on the destination country, naturalization may require you to live in a country for a set period before you can apply. Ancestry has no residence requirement in most cases because the claim already exists through your famiCitizenship by marriage:
- Marrying a citizen does not usually grant automatic citizenship. In many jurisdictions, spouses first receive a residence permit and may only apply for citizenship after completing a required period of residence. Ancestry‑based citizenship, however, relies solely on proving your lineage.
- Citizenship by investment: This route grants nationality in exchange for a qualifying investment. Ancestry has no financial investment requirement, which generally makes it the most cost-effective route for those who qualify. The trade-off is documentation. An ancestry claim ultimately hinges on the strength of your documentation. You must be able to produce civil records, such as birth and marriage certificates, archival documents, and other evidence, that verify each generational link and account for any discrepancies in your ancestors’ names. This is where most applicants need professional help.
Answer a few quick questions to see whether you may qualify for citizenship through your lineage. Choose a programme to begin.
Benefits of Citizenship by Ancestry
Confirming a citizenship you already hold by descent offers advantages that reach far beyond simply obtaining a second passport, including:
• Visa-free travel on a potentially stronger passport, expanding where you can go without applying for visas.
• The right to live and work in your ancestral country and, and, if it is an EU member state, across the entire European Union.
• Access to education and healthcare systems in the ancestral country is on the same footing as any other citizen.
• Greater optionality for your family, since citizenship by descent can often be passed to your children.
• No financial investment is required, making it the most affordable route to a second nationality for those who qualify.
• A formal reconnection with your heritage, giving legal recognition to your family’s history and identity.
What is involved
Every country sets its own procedure, but an ancestry claim always moves through three broad stages. Many programs are not as simple as they sound, which is why most applicants work with a law firm rather than attempt to go through the process on their own.
Confirming eligibility
First, you have to establish which ancestor you are claiming through and prove the line of nationality was never broken. A single gap, such as an ancestor who naturalized elsewhere or lost their citizenship before the next child was born, can quietly end a claim that looked straightforward on the surface. Dual-citizenship rules add another layer, since a few countries still require you to give up your current nationality. Getting this judgment wrong wastes months, so it is the stage where early legal review matters most.
Building the evidence
A claim is only as strong as the records behind it. The documents that prove each generation often sit in foreign civil registries, parish archives, or naturalization files that were never digitized, and each one may need certified translation and an apostille before a government will accept it. Locating, reconciling, and legalizing this paper trail is the longest and most demanding part of the process, and the most common point at which self-managed applications stall.
Submitting the application
The completed file goes to the relevant authority, whether a consulate, a central nationality department, or a local registry, each with its own format, sequence, and backlog. Processing times vary widely, and an application that is incomplete or filed in the wrong order is often sent back rather than corrected, adding months to the wait.
This is the work Harvey Law Group manages for you end to end, so that a missed detail does not cost you the claim.
The documents behind a claim
An ancestry claim is won or lost on paper. Depending on the country and how many generations your claim spans, you may need to assemble civil records for yourself and for every ancestor in the line: birth, marriage, and death certificates, proof of the ancestor’s original nationality, and, in some cases, evidence that citizenship was never renounced or lost along the way. Foreign documents typically have to be officially translated and legalized before any authority will look at them.
The real challenges lies in the procurement of historical records. Documents from decades or generations ago are often incomplete, contradictory, stored in remote archives, or recorded under names and spellings that no longer match. Reconciling those gaps into a chain a government will accept is skilled work, and it is the single most common reason claims stall. Our team provides access to expert genealogists who can locate and retrieve historical documents in more than 100 countries, the most complex part of the process and ensuring your claim is supported by a clear, verifiable evidentiary record.