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If your parent or grandparent was Italian, you may still have a legal right to an Italian passport, and with it the freedom to live, work, and invest across all 27 countries of the European Union. The rules changed in 2025. Here is exactly where you stand today.
This is not a visa you renew or an investment you maintain. Citizenship by descent is the recognition of a right you may have held since birth. Once recognised, it is yours for life.
Italian citizens travel visa free to over 185 destinations and hold the unrestricted right to live, work, study, and retire in any European Union country, from Lisbon to Vienna, with no permits and no minimum stay.
There is no property to buy and no fund to subscribe. If you qualify, the Italian state recognises a citizenship you already carry in your bloodline. The government filing fee is €600 per adult, plus document costs.
Italy has permitted dual citizenship since 1992. You keep your current nationality, subject to your own country’s rules, and your recognised status can pass to your children under the current framework.
For over a century, Italy recognised citizenship by descent with no generational limit. A single Italian ancestor who emigrated in the 1880s could anchor a claim for descendants four or five generations later. That era ended on 24 May 2025, when Law 74/2025 came into force and rewrote Article 3 bis of the citizenship law.
Under the new framework, a person born abroad who also holds another citizenship no longer acquires Italian citizenship automatically. Recognition now runs through two generations: in broad terms, you need a parent or grandparent who is, or was, exclusively an Italian citizen, or a parent who lived in Italy for two continuous years before your birth. The Ministry of the Interior confirmed the operating rules in Circular 26185 of 28 May 2025, and the Constitutional Court upheld the reform in ruling 63/2026, published in April 2026. These rules are settled law.
Here is what most headlines miss: the reform closed the widest door, but it left several others open. Transitional protections, judicial routes for special cases, a fast track to naturalisation for descendants, and a reacquisition window running to the end of 2027 all remain available. The right move depends entirely on the details of your family line, which is exactly what a proper eligibility review establishes.
You may have a live claim to Italian citizenship by descent if at least one of the following applies to you. Each condition has technical requirements underneath it, so treat this as a first filter, not a verdict.
A parent or grandparent who holds only Italian citizenship today, or who held only Italian citizenship at the time of your birth, or at their death if they passed away before you were born.
Your parent or adoptive parent, already an Italian citizen, resided in Italy for at least two continuous years before your birth or adoption. Historic residence certificates are required as proof.
Applications submitted to a consulate, comune, or court before 27 March 2025, or with an appointment already booked and communicated by that date, are assessed under the old rules with no generational limit.
Judicial recognition actions filed before the cutoff date continue under the previous framework. If your family started a case, its value may extend to you.
In every scenario, the chain matters. If an ancestor in your line renounced Italian citizenship or naturalised elsewhere before the next birth in the chain, the line may be broken. This is where most claims are won or lost.
Authorities require certified evidence: non naturalisation certificates, civil records, and legalised translations. Sworn personal declarations are not accepted on the key points, so the document file must be built properly.
The right route depends on where you live, how your line qualifies, and how quickly you want to be in Europe. Choosing well at the start saves months, sometimes years.
Even if the direct descent route is closed for your generation, Italian law still offers meaningful paths for people with Italian roots. These are the ones we assess most often.
If a parent or grandparent was an Italian citizen by birth, you can apply for citizenship after just two years of legal residence in Italy, reduced from the standard ten. For many families this is now the most realistic path to the passport.
Former Italian citizens who lost their citizenship before 15 August 1992, typically by naturalising abroad, and who were born in Italy or lived there for two continuous years, can reclaim it by declaration until 31 December 2027.
Children of Italian citizens born abroad after 24 May 2025 can acquire citizenship by declaration within 36 months of birth, currently exempt from the government contribution. Young adults with an Italian by birth parent or grandparent can also declare after two years of residence in Italy.
A citizenship by descent case is a legal file built on documents that may span three countries and a hundred years. This is how we run it, together with specialised Italian counsel.
We map your family line against the Law 74/2025 tests and the transitional rules, and tell you plainly whether you have a case and which route fits it.
Birth, marriage, and death records, non naturalisation certificates, apostilles, and certified translations, gathered from every relevant jurisdiction.
Consulate, comune, or court, chosen for your situation. If you relocate, we coordinate the residence permit that lets you live in Italy while you wait.
Registration of your Italian records, passport issuance, and if you wish, planning for banking, tax residence, and where in Europe you settle next.
Official information on Italian citizenship is published by the Ministry of the Interior at interno.gov.it and by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at esteri.it. This page reflects the framework as of July 2026 and is general information, not legal advice.
Tell me about your ancestry in two minutes. I will review it personally and come to the call already knowing your case. Prefer to talk first? Pick a time below the form.
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Tell me about your family line, your documents, and your timeline. I will tell you honestly whether you have a case, which route fits it, and what it takes to win it.