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GERMAN CITIZENSHIP

‘I can’t give up my passport’: Foreigners wait for Germany to change citizenship laws

Germany's coalition government has pledged to overhaul nationality laws, including dual citizenship. But foreigners have doubts that it will happen soon. And until then, many feel held back, writes Caitlin Hardee.

'I can't give up my passport': Foreigners wait for Germany to change citizenship laws
Anna is one of many people waiting for Germany to change its strict citizenship laws.

Parliamentary democracy with a pre-agreed, binding coalition contract is a great thing. Parties aren’t just elected for the vibes – in theory, you know exactly what will get done in any given legislative period. In practice, timelines remain murky and life often throws political curveballs, which delay the agenda, causing uncertainty and frustration. So it is with the keenly awaited liberalisation of dual citizenship in Germany.

While the government fields crises and works through its own top priorities, many immigrants continue to put aspects of their lives on hold until the day they can finally acquire a German passport and become fully enfranchised.

The coalition pact –  made up of the SPD, Greens and FDP – detailed plans to lower the residency requirement from eight to five years (or even three in some cases) as well as permit non-EU nationals to hold multiple citizenships.

While representatives of Germany’s ruling traffic light coalition previously assured us that the reform would be a priority, and indeed come in this legislative period, the question of exactly when remains up in the air.

Writing on behalf of press spokesperson Sascha Lawrenz, a staffer of the Federal Ministry of the Interior and for Community reiterated that the coalition contract included plans for a modernisation of nationality law, including enabling multinationality and simplifying the naturalisation process.

“At this time, it is not possible to predict how much time the lawmaking process will take,” the spokesperson told The Local.

READ ALSO: When will Germany relax dual citizenship laws?

The longer it takes for reform, the more impact on lives

Perhaps a frustrating answer for the many who are desperate to know when things will get moving. 

Professional soprano Kirstin Sharpin, who holds joint citizenship from the United Kingdom and New Zealand, will be eligible to apply for German naturalisation later in 2022, but is waiting until progress occurs on the proposed reform.

“Applying immediately would mean opening a huge can of worms and huge legal fees in an attempt to retain my current citizenships, both of which are vital to my work,” said the singer. “The longer it takes for reform to happen, the more impact this will have on my professional and personal lives.”

US citizen Scott Fountain has also dealt with tangible disadvantages under the current law. “I had problems with my investments here through Consors because I am American,” he said. His status as a solely foreign national forced him to divest in previously held funds and stocks. “I have been interested in German citizenship for a long time,” emphasised Fountain, who came to Germany in 1972 with the US army, was married to a German national and has children here. “But I do not really want to give up my American passport, so I am waiting to see what develops.”

Anna, who is also from the US, faces even more pressing concerns. She has spent about a decade in Germany “on one student visa after the other”. Now she holds a doctorate and a job-seeking visa which expires at the end of March. “Although I would have been able to apply for German citizenship by now, I haven’t, because of the ban on double citizenship,” said Anna. She now has employment and has applied for a skilled workers’ visa, but harbours doubts due to the job field and priority rules granting primacy to qualified EU candidates.

A German and British passport.

A German and British passport. Many people in Germany don’t want to give up their original passport to get German citizenship. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Britta Pedersen

If her application fails, she would need to marry her boyfriend last-minute—or “quit my job, my apartment, my life, and leave immediately. After 10-plus years and a PhD,” said Anna. “Assuming it does all work out with the employment visa, I would still be forced to go back to the Ausländerbehörde (immigration office) every year, since at our organisation our work is financed on a yearly project-basis with EU funds.” Naturalisation would remove those worries, give her planning security and allow her to vote in Germany, “which is really important to me since I am politically active,” she said.

‘I will not give up my American citizenship’

A third US citizen, speaking on condition of anonymity due to sensitive ongoing talks with their employer, continues to lose professional opportunities, workplace flexibility and potential revenue as long as dual nationality remains out of reach. The source has been in Germany since the mid 90s, was married to a German national and is now divorced with two German-American children. “So I’ve been eligible for… ever,” they said wryly. “But I’ve always held off because I will not give up my American citizenship.”

They expressed the standard desire, given their longstanding taxpaying and integrated status, to be able to vote in Germany – and to benefit from new options of remote work. “As an American citizen, I can’t take advantage of any of the remote work rules in my company,” they related. Due to corporate policy, tax and insurance regulations, they also currently aren’t allowed to work abroad even for a few days bookending a vacation when they do happen to be stateside. “As soon as these rules officially change, I will stand in line for days to be able to get the double citizenship,” they said.

German citizen Anne Macauley and her husband and sons, who hold Sierra Leonean passports, are also hoping for a speedy implementation of the planned reform. “I think for [them] the benefit to get the German citizenship is still higher than waiting for the law to be changed. However, it would still be great if they all could also have dual citizenship,” said Macauley. Her family members are partway through the ponderous application process and currently facing mandatory renunciation of their original nationality.

READ ALSO: ‘I finally feel at home’ How Germany’s planned changes to citizenship laws affect foreigners

Given the slowness of local bureaucracy, Macauley still holds on to hope that the reform will come soon enough to make a difference. “The whole process of getting the German passport is already very expensive,” she pointed out. “If we could save the money to renounce the old citizenship for three people, that would be great; also the aspect of having to pay visa fees to travel to your home country is kind of strange.”

US citizen Kevin Wilkins, whose application is in a “deep freeze” and is not actively pursuing naturalisation until the law changes, is less optimistic about the timeline. “I’ll be very surprised if the current government has any time at all to devote to new immigration law changes in the next few years,” he said.

Victoria Messer exists in a similar bureaucratic purgatory. Foiled in the past by the current rules, shuffled from district to district, dealing with capricious inconsistencies of implementation and now once again waiting for a response, she juggles a few hopeful scenarios under which for her, the door to dual citizenship could open.

Victoria Messer

Victoria Messer. Photo courtesy of Victoria Messer.

One: unlike her hardline caseworkers in Berlin-Mitte who immediately laid down the law on mandatory renunciation, the office in her new district of Pankow could arbitrarily prove more lenient. “So far they haven’t asked me to renounce my American citizenship,” she said.

Two: The process in Pankow, which often takes a couple years, could drag on until even a late-stage citizenship reform came into effect. “I’m just not sure where in the process I am,” Messer said.

READ ALSO: In limbo: Why Germany’s reform of dual citizenship laws can’t come soon enough

Three: In a dream scenario for Messer and all others impacted by the law, neither the district office nor the federal government would drag their feet. A speedy immigration reform would pass within the year, the local offices would hire more employees and digitalise their processes, and there’d be shiny new passports and joyous naturalisation ceremonies all around. As Messer says: “We will see.”

This article is part of a series exploring immigration and citizenship issues of foreigners in Germany. Got a story or want us to look into something? Let us know by emailing [email protected]

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GERMAN CITIZENSHIP

REVEALED: Citizenship backlogs and waiting times in major German cities

After the city of Cologne stopped accepting citizenship applications due to hefty backlogs, we look at how other German cities are coping with an increase in requests for naturalisation.

REVEALED: Citizenship backlogs and waiting times in major German cities

Excitement for the introduction of the new citizenship law is building in Germany, with many foreigners desperate to take advantage of lower residence requirements and the right to hold dual nationality.

But one nagging question is prevalent in the run-up to June 27th: will citizenship offices in Germany really be able to cope with a flood of new applications after the new law comes in?

The growing backlogs at German citizenship offices has been common knowledge for some time now, culminating in May with the announcement out of Cologne that no new applications would be accepted until at least September.

Speaking to The Local, the authority said they had made the decision after finding themselves unable to keep up with the high number of enquiries they were receiving. 

Much like Cologne, many immigration offices in Germany are currently struggling to deal with low staffing levels and an influx of applications from Syrian refugees, many of whom have recently become eligible to apply for naturalisation. 

Once the dual nationality law comes into force in June – accompanied by a campaign promoting the new citizenship rules – authorities are expecting a tidal wave of applications.

So, how are things looking in immigration offices at the moment, and are authorities prepared for the upcoming changes? 

Here’s what’s going on in seven major German cities. 

Berlin

Since the new centralised citizenship authority opened at the start of the year, there are signs that things are moving a lot faster in Berlin.

With additional staff, an online eligibility check and digital applications speeding up the process, many new applicants are waiting just a few months to hear back from the Landesamt für Enwanderung (LEA) and receive their German passports.

Naturalisation ceremony in Berlin

Engelhard Mazanke, director of the LEA, speaks at a naturalisation ceremony in the Berlin district of Wedding. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Bernd von Jutrczenka

That said, the LEA revealed to The Local that there were still around 40,000 applications from before the start of the year hadn’t yet been processed. That’s because these old paper applications have needed to be scanned into a computer and digitalised before being handled by a case worker.

If documents from these old applications are out of date, that may delay things still further as applicants have to resubmit proof of employment and other time-sensitive documents. 

In addition, around 16,000 online applications have been submitted online since the start of the year, meaning case workers at the LEA currently have their hands full.

Once the new law comes in, the authority estimates that as many of 80,000 applications could be submitted this year. They are currently aiming to increase the amount of applications they can process from 9,000 per year to 20,000.

READ ALSO: Foreigners in Berlin furious over German citizenship delays

Munich

As of the end of April this year, 17,592 naturalisation applications were currently being processed in the Bavarian capital.

A spokesperson told The Local that it currently takes around 12-18 months to process an application once it has been submitted.

“This processing time is due to the high number of applications that are received and those that could not or cannot be further processed or finalised for various reasons, such as missing documents, lack of cooperation from customers, and staff shortages,” the spokesperson said. 

German Grundgesetz

Two copies of the German Grundgesetz, or Basic Law, lie on a table in a library. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Frank Molter

In Bavaria as a whole, the number of applications received by authorities has tripled over the past ten years, and the state government expects a significant spike in applications after the new law comes in.

However, the use of an online ‘quick check’ tool to screen applicants means that foreigners don’t need to wait for an initial consultation, and applications can also be submitted digitally. 

READ ALSO: How German immigration office delays hurt lives of foreign workers

Frankfurt

In the state of Hesse, applications for naturalisation are handled by municipalities and towns with residents of 7,500 people or more before being forwarded to the central authority in Darmstadt.

Due to the fractured nature of the system, no overall figures are available for the amount of applications currently being processed. 

However, a spokesperson for Frankfurt City Council revealed to The Local that applications had risen significantly over the past five years, from around 3,500 in 2019 to more than 6,200 in 2023.

The average waiting time for citizenship in Frankfurt is approximately six months – though this is increasing over time – with an additional 18 months required for processing at Darmstadt Regional Council.

The authorities expect the number of applications in Frankfurt to “double or triple” when the new law comes in. “No additional staff is available for this task,” the spokesperson added. 

Hamburg

In Hamburg, around 26,000 applications are currently being processed, with average waiting times of over a year.

However, the local citizenship authority is hoping to speed things up this year with an increased number of staff and the introduction of the Online Access Act, which allows foreigners to submit a naturalisation application digitally.

Much like in Berlin and Bavaria, potential applicants can also check if they are eligible via an online ‘quick check’ tool rather than waiting for a phone consultation. 

President Frank Walter-Steinmeier naturalisation ceremony Hamburg

President Frank Walter-Steinmeier (SPD) speaks at naturalisation ceremony in Hamburg in 2018. Photo: picture alliance / Christian Charisius/dpa | Christian Charisius

Stuttgart 

Around 4,000 naturalisation applications are currently submitted in Stuttgart every year. According to the latest figures, 8,000 are currently being processed and applicants can expect waiting times of around 9-10 months. 

A spokesperson told The Local that, based on estimates from the federal goverment, they expect the number of applications to increase by a factor of 2.3 once the new naturalisation law comes into force, meaning more than 9,000 naturalisation applications per year would be expected in the city after June.

With around 11 new staff positions created at the city’s naturalisation office in 2024, the authorities are hoping this will help cope with the influx. 

READ MORE: Stuttgart’s immigration queues are gone, but problems persist

Dortmund 

As of May 28th this year, 5,800 naturalisation applications were currently being processed in the city of Dortmund in western Germany.

At the same time, around 4,000 people were waiting for an appointment to apply for naturalisation. According to the local citizenship authority, the waiting time for this consultation is around 6-8 months.

 “The demand for naturalisations has already been rising continuously since 2021 and is not exclusively due to the entry into force of the new Citizenship Act,” a spokesperson for the authority told The Local. 

“Accordingly, the City of Dortmund has already been taking various organisational and technical measures to strengthen the naturalisation authority since 2021. The number of employees in the naturalisation office has also more than doubled between 2021 and 2024.”

Bremen

A spokesperson for the Interior Ministry in Bremen told The Local that the city state was currently processing around 10,840 citizenship applications in total.

These include 6,600 “largely unprocessed” applications, around 1,260 applications that are in the initial stages of processing and around 2,260 that are in the final review stages.

In addition, around 720 people have been provisionally granted citizenship on the condition that they give up their previous nationality – and have yet to do so. 

A woman shows the booklet with her naturalisation certificate at Neukölln town hall in Berlin in April 2016.

A woman shows the booklet with her naturalisation certificate at Neukölln town hall in Berlin in April 2016. Photo: picture alliance / dpa | Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert

The ministry expects applications to double to around 10,000 this year after the new law comes in – up from 5,749 in 2023 and 5,031 in 2022. Waiting times for citizenship are currently around two years. 

“The expected significant increase in the number of applications will lead to a further strain on the already overstretched naturalisation authorities,” a spokesperson for the citizenship office told The Local.

“It must be taken into account that the new regulations will lead to a reduction in processing times, for example because it will no longer be necessary to release the old citizenship.

“At the same time, however, the reduction in workload will be offset by the very high workload due to the sharp rise in the number of applications.”

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