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GERMAN CITIZENSHIP

How can over-60s get German citizenship under the new dual nationality law?

Germany is overhauling its citizenship laws, with specific carve-outs for older applicants. Here's what applicants over the age of 60 should know about the new requirements.

A citizenship applicants reads the German constitution.
A citizenship applicants reads the state constitution in Germany. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Marijan Murat

As Germany braces to allow dual nationality and reduce the years of residence required for naturalisation from June 27th 2024, many foreigners in the country are already getting ready to submit their applications. 

Despite the headline changes, many of the conditions for getting a German passport will remain roughly the same: as a general rule, you’ll still need to prove your knowledge of German laws and society and the German language, as well a continuous period of residence in Germany and the ability to take care of yourself (and any dependents) financially. 

READ ALSO: What do I need to apply for German citizenship under the new law?

That said, there are some aspects of the new law that are designed to make it easier for older applicants – and particularly members of the guest worker generation – to naturalise as Germans, so if you fit into this age bracket, you could have any easier time once the new rules come into force. 

Whether it’s exceptions to naturalisation tests or proving sufficient income, here are the key things that seniors applying for citizenship need to know. 

READ ALSO: How to get a speedy response on your German citizenship application

Can I apply for citizenship while claiming a pension? 

A key requirement of naturalisation in Germany is being able to cover your own living costs without relying on the state for financial help.

Luckily for retirees, a pension doesn’t count as state support, so you won’t be excluded automatically just because you’re no longer working. 

That said, it’s important to be able to show that your pension – and any other income you have – is enough to cover you needs. 

As SPD politician Hakan Demir said in a recent response to a parliamentary question: “If you can make a comfortable living on your pension without drawing social benefits, nothing stands in the way of your naturalisation.”

Of course, that does mean that people who require top-ups from the state, for example by claiming Grundsicherung (state top-ups for your pension allowance), are likely to have a harder time naturalising and may even be excluded entirely.

That’s because the new law specifically states that applicants should be able to support themselves and their financial dependents without claiming the types of social welfare detailed in the Sozialgesetzbuch (SGB) XII – including Grundsicherung.

READ ALSO: Can I still get German citizenship after claiming benefits?

There is an exception to this rule for people who have been in full-time employment for 20 out of the past 24 months, as well as carve-outs for both the Turkish guest worker generation and so-called contract workers (Vertragsarbeiter) in the former GDR. 

For those in the guest worker generation, this involves having entered the Federal Republic of Germany before 1974, while contract worker status would involve having entered the GDR before 1990. 

What are the new language requirements for seniors?

Proving sufficient German language skills – most commonly through a lower intermediate, or B1, test – is for most people an essential component of the naturalisation process.

In the new law, however, there are some instances in which the need to take a formal exam is dispensed with. 

In the case of guest workers, who weren’t offered language or integration courses after arriving in Germany in the 1950s and ’60s, simply interacting with case officers in German is treated as sufficient evidence of language skills. 

German learning resources at a language school.

German learning resources at a language school. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Arne Dedert

In a previous draft of the law, over-67s were also exempted from taking a formal B1 test. But government sources say that there will be no specific carve-outs that apply to everyone over a certain age.

Instead, carve-outs will be possible for people who have personal reasons for not being able to attend a language course, for example due to age, illness or a disability. 

The draft states that “a hardship clause will be created for the language certificate, whereby in cases of hardship, oral skills are sufficient if the acquisition of language skills level B1… is impossible or permanently difficult”.

This applies, for example, to people with disabilities that affect their learning capabilities or those who have to care full-time for a close relative. 

Do older applications still need to take a citizenship test? 

In general, yes, though once again there is an exception for people from the guest worker generation and contract workers from the former GDR.

As well as eschewing formal language tests, people in these groups won’t be expected to take a citizenship test either.

If you don’t fit into that group but have age-related issues that may make it difficult for you to pass the citizenship test and B1 exam, or suffer from illness or a disability, you may still be able to avoid them by getting a note from your doctor or talking directly with the citizenship office.

Alternatively, you can check out our explainer for some of the other exceptions that may allow you to skip the test:

Who’s exempt from taking a German citizenship test for naturalisation?

Is there anything else that over-60s should know? 

As far as most of the application process goes, older applicants are treated much the same way as younger ones and are generally subject to the same requirements.

That means that proof of income and sufficient living space, birth certificates and marriage certificates, and proof of things like health and care insurance will all be essential to your application.

If you want to naturalise with B1 German, you can do so after five years, whereas people who can prove exceptional integration (not to mention C1 German!) can apply after just three. 

A certificate of naturalisation from the Federal Republic of Germany lies on a table. Foreigners in Germany should soon be able to obtain German citizenship more easily, according to plans of the federal government.

A certificate of naturalisation from the Federal Republic of Germany lies on a table. Foreigners in Germany should soon be able to obtain German citizenship more easily, according to plans of the federal government. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/dpa-Zentralbild | Fernando Gutierrez-Juarez

As mentioned, applicants will soon be able to keep their previous nationalities when becoming German – that is, provided your other nationalities permit dual citizenship. 

READ ALSO: When and how can I apply for German citizenship?

One way in which rules are getting tighter is in the approach to handling previous convictions – especially if these convictions seem to have had a racist or anti-Semitic motive behind them.

According to the most recent draft of the law, “acts motivated by anti-Semitism, racism or other dehumanising behaviour” are not compatible with Germany’s constitutional order and would therefore automatically bar someone from naturalising as German. 

Editor’s note: We amended the implementation date for German citizenship from June 26th to June 27th 2024 after confirmation from the German government on May 16th. 

Member comments

  1. Does anyone know if the validity of the B1 language test and the citizenship test expires? I passed both in 2015 or 2016, and would rather not have to take them again.

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GERMAN CITIZENSHIP

Germany to launch campaign informing foreigners about new citizenship law

When Germany's new citizenship law enters into force in June 2024, a website and nationwide information campaign will be launched alongside it to tell people how - and why - to apply for citizenship.

Germany to launch campaign informing foreigners about new citizenship law

According to a report in German daily Bild, the advertising campaign will kick off on the same date the new rules enter into force – most likely on June 27th – providing foreigners with guidance for their applications.

This was confirmed by the Interior Ministry on Thursday in response to an enquiry by The Local.

Bild refers in its report to a letter written by Reem Alabali-Radovan (SPD), the Federal Commissioner for Integration, to the ministers in the governing traffic-light coalition. 

In it, Alabi-Radovan writes that the campaign will inform would-be applicants “about the requirements and procedures for naturalisation” in order to speed up the work of the local authorities. According to Bild, this information will be available in both German and English. 

As well as pamphlets, there will also be a website where applicants can find relevant information on the new law and explanatory videos, Alabi-Radovan writes.

The government will also take to social networks like X (formerly Twitter) and Facebook to answer questions from foreigners, and will feature stories from successful applicants in their advertising campaigns. 

Currently, there are numerous groups on social media where foreigners can pose questions on the citizenship process and share their experiences.

However, the vast majority of these are run by unofficial sources.

READ ALSO: Where to get free immigration advice in Germany

An influx of applications

With the governing coalition planning to relax many of its rules for naturalisation on June 27th, authorities are expected a tidal wave of applications from foreigners in the country. 

Along cutting ordinary residence requirements from eight years to five, a previous ban on dual nationality for non-EU citizens will be lifted, allowing applicants to keep their existing passports after naturalisation. 

There will also be carve-outs designed to make it easier for members of the Turkish guest-worker generation to naturalise, for example by scrapping the need for formal language tests for this group. 

Back in March, the head of Berlin’s Landesamt für Einwanderung (LEA), Engelhard Mazanke, referred to the government’s upcoming advertising campaign and said he expected that as many as 80,000 people to submit an application this year when the new law comes into force.

However, this is a conservative estimate: according to the LEA, around 330,000 people in Berlin would be eligible to apply after the new law kicks in. 

READ ALSO: Foreigners in Berlin furious over German citizenship delays

Though Berlin is an extreme case, residents in many other parts of the country such as Hamburg and North-Rhine Westphalia already wait more than a year for their citizenship applicants to be processed.

This has sparked concern among foreigners that the new law may exacerbate the long waiting times and hefty backlogs. 

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