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AUSTRIAN CITIZENSHIP

Vienna launches initiative to help stateless people get Austrian citizenship

People who do not hold citizenship, 'stateless persons', are entitled to an easier process to naturalise Austrians when they are young, but many don't know about it. The City of Vienna wants to change that.

Vienna launches initiative to help stateless people get Austrian citizenship
Austrian citizenship application waits in Vienna have halved. But experts say there's still more room for improvement. (© Amanda Previdelli / The Local)

Austria currently has around 19,000 people who are stateless or whose citizenship is unclear or unknown, and 15,000 of them live in Vienna

People become stateless, for example, due to administrative errors in their country of origin or due to the oppression of minorities in their respective countries. However, the majority of statelessness in Vienna is due to inherited statelessness, meaning neither parent holds a citizenship. 

There are around 12,000 who were born in Vienna and do not have any citizenship. For these people, the naturalisation process in Austria is simplified if they are young – but many do not know the rules and end up missing the window of opportunity.

What is the simplified process?

In order to obtain Austrian citizenship, interested parties must currently have at least € 1,100 available after deduction of housing costs. This high value is particularly difficult for single parents, part-time workers and students. 

READ ALSO: Reader question: Will my children get an Austrian passport if born in Austria?

However, after their 18th birthday, people classified as stateless from birth born in Austria are exempt from these strict rules for three years. Until they turn 21, they don’t need to prove such an income.

For data privacy reasons, the government cannot reach out to the affected people directly. However, Vienna launched an information website to try to spread the information. 

The first step is booking an appointment with the local citizenship and visa authority (the MA 35 in Vienna). After an initial information meeting, the MA will clarify which information or documents they might need on individual cases. You can then submit your application in person to the authority.

The processing time depends on each case, and even if you meet the requirements, you may not be granted citizenship, the MA 35 said.

Aren’t people born in Austria automatically Austrians?

No. Austria follows a “jus sanguinis” concept of citizenship, meaning that citizenship is transferred by blood and not by place of birth. 

A person born to Austrian parents abroad is automatically Austrian, but one born to foreign citizens in Austria receives the citizenship of their parents. 

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: When is dual citizenship allowed in Austria?

If a person born in Austria is stateless, they can undergo this simplified procedure to acquire Austrian citizenship. But even if they already hold citizenship, there are advantages in the naturalisation process. Typically, a person would have to live in Austria for ten years before applying for naturalisation. 

However, if they were born here, that time is shortened to six years. However, they would still need to give up all their other nationalities as Austria does not allow multiple citizenships via naturalisation with very few exceptions.

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AUSTRIAN CITIZENSHIP

IN NUMBERS: Who are the new Austrian citizens in 2024?

The number of people receiving Austrian citizenship through naturalisation processes is slowing down. Here's a look at some stats about the new citizens and where they are from originally.

IN NUMBERS: Who are the new Austrian citizens in 2024?

In 2023, Austrian citizenship was granted to 19,939 people, including more than 8,000 living abroad, according to Statistik Austria. The number was 3.2 percent lower in total than last year.

“The trend of rising naturalisation figures did not continue in 2023. The decline is mainly due to the fact that naturalisations of victims of National Socialism and their descendants fell by 17.7 percent”, said Tobias Thomas, Director General of Statistics Austria.

Austria’s naturalisation rate (ratio of naturalisations to the number of non-Austrian citizens living in Austria) is relatively low compared to the rest of Europe and continues at 0.7 percent. This is because the naturalisation process is not easy in the country – people generally need to be residents for ten years, pay high fees (around €2,000) and give up any other citizenship they hold.

READ ALSO: Will my children get an Austrian passport if born in Austria?

The hurdles are rarely worth it for EU citizens who can live and work in Austria. This is shown in the Statistik Austria data.

Who are the new Austrian citizens?

Only 9 percent of the naturalisations were from people from EU states. The highest proportion of new Austrians held Israeli citizenship (21.4 percent). They are followed by people from Syria (9.4 percent) and the United States (8.2 percent). 

Other nationalities include Turkey (5.7 percent), United Kingdom (5.6 percent), Bosnia and Herzegovina (4 percent), and Afghanistan (4 percent). Nine percent of the naturalisations were of people from EU states and 4.4 percent of people from African countries.

The majority of the people naturalising as Austrians that were from the United Kingdom, the United States or Israel resided abroad – most of them were naturalised via the new process for restitution of Austrian citizenship to victims of the Nazi regime and their descendants. In these cases, people are allowed to keep their other citizenship. 

READ ALSO: Austria improves nationality law for descendants of Nazi victims

About half of the people naturalising (50.2 percent) were women, and a third were under 18 years old. 

In seven federal provinces, more people were naturalised in the year 2023 than the previous year. The relative increases were highest in Burgenland (44.9 percent to 297 naturalisations), followed by Styria (43.8 percent to 1,309), Upper Austria (36.1 percent to 1,808), Lower Austria (33.4 percent to 2,031), Tyrol (18.6 percent to 913), Salzburg (8.8 percent to 530) and Vorarlberg (4.6 percent to 677). 

Fewer naturalisations compared to the year 2022 were reported in Carinthia (−21.4 percent to 434) and Vienna (−12.9 percent to 3,899).

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