Check German citizenship from abroad (§5 StAG / descent) - preliminary examination 2026

Citizenship law is complex - and many people do not know whether they are entitled to German citizenship because no one has ever carefully examined the question. This form is intended to provide initial guidance. It automatically analyses your details and shows whether one of the relevant legal bases - such as descent, historical disadvantage or Nazi persecution - could apply to your situation. This saves you the time and effort of a full legal examination as long as it is not yet clear whether there is any basis at all.

The result is non-binding and is intended solely as an initial assessment. The following information explains what it means and what limits it has.

Preliminary result (non-binding)

German Citizenship Eligibility Check

This result is an automated preliminary assessment based solely on the information you provided.
It does not constitute legal advice and does not replace an individual legal consultation.
No attorney-client relationship is created by using this tool.

 

Your Eligibility status

Your case requires further review.

Based on your answers, we could not identify a clear automatic route to German citizenship through descent. However, this does not necessarily mean you are ineligible. Under §Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation), individuals who can demonstrate strong ties to Germany - such as German language skills, frequent visits, family connections, or cultural engagement - may still qualify for German citizenship at the discretion of the authorities.

This is not an automatic entitlement, but it is a real legal pathway. Please provide your details below so our legal team can assess your individual situation.


Your Eligibility status

Based on your answers, your mother naturalised in another country or otherwise lost her German citizenship (for example, through marriage to a non-German before April 1, 1953) before you were born. Under German law, this generally causes a loss of German citizenship, breaking the chain of descent.

However, there are important exceptions:

1. Article 116 (Nazi Persecution): If your mother (or her ancestors) were forced to flee Germany due to political, racial, or religious persecution between 1933 and 1945, your citizenship rights may be restored.

2. §5 StAG (Declaration): If your mother lost her citizenship through marriage to a foreigner before April 1, 1953, you may be entitled to acquire citizenship by declaration (deadline: August 19, 2031).

3. §14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation): Even without the above, you may still qualify if you can demonstrate strong ties to Germany.

Please submit your details below so our legal team can review your specific case.


Your Eligibility status

Determining whether and when your mother naturalised in another country is the most critical step in this process. If she naturalized before you were born, it may have broken the chain of German citizenship.

Please provide your details below so our legal team can help you investigate these historical records. Even if naturalisation did occur, Article 116 or §14 StAG may still provide a pathway.


Your Eligibility status

Great news! Because you were born after January 1, 1975, to a German mother who had not naturalised elsewhere, you automatically acquired German citizenship at birth under §4 StAG. You do not need to "apply" for it - you simply need to undergo a Determination of Citizenship procedure to claim your passport. Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

Please submit your details below and our legal team will guide you through the process.


Your Eligibility status

Good news. Historically, German mothers could not pass on citizenship to children born in wedlock before 1975. However, under the new Section 5 StAG rules, you are legally entitled to claim your German citizenship by declaration.

Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship. Important: This right expires on August 19, 2031. Please submit your details below to begin the process.


Your Eligibility status

Great news! Because your parents were not legally married at the time of your birth, the historical restriction that prevented German mothers from passing citizenship to children born in wedlock before 1975 does not apply to you. Your German mother passed citizenship to you automatically. Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

You need to undergo a Determination of Citizenship procedure. Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

Because you were born before the German Basic Law was enacted on May 24, 1949, your case falls outside the standard Section 5 declaration rules for gender discrimination.

However, you and your descendants may still qualify for German citizenship under:

1. Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation) - if you can demonstrate ties to Germany.

2. Article 116 (Nazi Persecution Restitution) - if your family suffered persecution between 1933-1945.

Please submit your details below for a detailed legal review.


Your Eligibility status

Great news! Because your parents were not legally married at the time of your birth, your German mother passed citizenship to you automatically, regardless of the date of birth. The marriage restriction only applied to children born in wedlock. Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

You need to undergo a Determination of Citizenship procedure. Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

Based on your answers, your father naturalised in another country or otherwise lost his German citizenship before you were born. Under German law, this generally causes a loss of German citizenship, breaking the chain of descent.

However, there are important exceptions:

1. Article 116 (Nazi Persecution): If he (or his ancestors) were forced to flee Germany due to political, racial, or religious persecution between 1933 and 1945, your citizenship rights may be restored.

2. §14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation): Even without persecution, you may still qualify if you can demonstrate strong ties to Germany.

Please submit your details below for review.


Your Eligibility status

Determining whether and when your father naturalised in another country is the most critical step in this process. If he naturalised before you were born, it may have broken the chain of German citizenship.

Please provide your details below so our legal team can help you investigate. Even if naturalisation occurred, Article 116 or §14 StAG may still provide a pathway.


Your Eligibility status

Great news! Because you were born in wedlock to a German father who had not naturalised elsewhere, you automatically acquired German citizenship at birth under §4 StAG. You likely only need to undergo a formal Determination of Citizenship procedure. Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

Great news! Because you were born after July 1, 1993, German fathers can pass on citizenship to children born out of wedlock, provided legal paternity was established under German law (acknowledgement given or court procedure initiated before age 23).

You automatically acquired German citizenship at birth. Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

Good news. Historically, unmarried German fathers could not pass on citizenship to children born before July 1, 1993. However, under the new Section 5 StAG rules, you are legally entitled to claim your German citizenship by declaration.

Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship. Important: This right expires on August 19, 2031. Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

Because you were born out of wedlock to a German father before the German Basic Law was enacted on May 24, 1949, your case falls outside the standard Section 5 declaration rules.

However, you may still qualify under:

1. §Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation) - if you can demonstrate ties to Germany.

2. Article 116 - if your family suffered Nazi persecution (1933-1945).

Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

Fantastic news! Because at least one of your parents was still a German citizen when you were born, you automatically acquired German citizenship at birth. You do not need to worry about historical gender discrimination rules. Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

You simply need to go through the formal Determination of Citizenship procedure. Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

If both of your parents naturalised in another country or otherwise lost their German citizenship before you were born, the chain of German citizenship was generally broken.

However, there are important exceptions:

1. Article 116 (Nazi Persecution): If they were forced to flee Germany due to persecution between 1933 and 1945, your citizenship rights may be restored.

2. §5 StAG (Declaration): If a German mother among them lost citizenship through marriage before April 1, 1953, the declaration pathway may apply (deadline: August 19, 2031).

3. §14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation): Even without the above, you may qualify if you can demonstrate strong ties to Germany.

Please submit your details below for review.


Your Eligibility status

Unfortunately, because your ancestor left Germany before 1904 and did not register with a German consulate or renew a German passport within their first 10 years abroad (and before January 1, 1914), they lost their German citizenship under the 10-year emigration rule (§21 RuStAG). This means the chain of descent was broken.

However, §Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation) may still be an option if you can demonstrate strong ties to Germany (such as language skills, frequent visits, family connections, or cultural engagement). This is not an automatic entitlement, but it is a real legal pathway.

Please submit your details below for review.


Your Eligibility status

Whether your ancestor maintained their registration with a German consulate or renewed their passport is a critical question. If they did, the 10-year rule does not apply and the chain may be intact. If they did not, German citizenship was lost.

Our legal team can help investigate historical consular records. Additionally, even if loss occurred, §Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation) may provide an alternative pathway.

Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

You may qualify for citizenship restoration under Article 116.

Although your ancestor naturalised or lost their German citizenship before the next generation was born, the standard chain-breaking rules do not apply because they fled Nazi persecution. Under German law (Article 116 of the Basic Law and §15 StAG), you and your descendants have the right to have your citizenship restored. There is no deadline for this claim.

Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

Please provide your details below so our legal team can guide you through the process.


Your Eligibility status

Because your German ancestor naturalised in another country before the birth of the next generation, they automatically lost their German citizenship. This means they could not pass it down to their children, and the chain of descent was broken.

However, §Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation) may still be an option if you can demonstrate strong ties to Germany (language skills, visits, family connections, cultural engagement).

If you believe there are unique legal circumstances, please submit your details below for review.


Your Eligibility status

Whether your ancestor naturalised before the next generation was born is a critical question that determines whether the citizenship chain remained intact.

Our legal team can help investigate this. Even if naturalisation did occur, Article 116 (Nazi persecution) or §Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation) may still provide a pathway.

Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

You may qualify for citizenship restoration under Article 116.

Although your parents naturalised or lost their German citizenship, they were affected by Nazi persecution (1933-1945). Under Article 116 of the Basic Law and §15 StAG, you have the right to have your citizenship restored. There is no deadline for this claim.

Note: Since June 27, 2024, dual nationality is fully permitted - you do not need to give up your current citizenship.

Please provide your details below so our legal team can guide you through the process.


Your Eligibility status

Unfortunately, because your parent naturalised or lost their German citizenship before you were born, the chain of descent was broken at the parent level - even though your ancestor's citizenship was intact.

However, §Section 14 StAG (Discretionary Naturalisation) may still be an option if you can demonstrate strong ties to Germany (language skills, visits, family connections, cultural engagement).

Please submit your details below for review.


Your Eligibility status

This is very promising! Both links in your chain appear to be intact - your German ancestor retained their citizenship, and your parent did too at the time of your birth.

However, because German laws changed several times regarding gender and marriage (the 1975 rule for mothers and the 1993 rule for fathers), our legal team needs to manually review the exact dates and circumstances of your specific family tree to confirm your eligibility and determine whether the standard §4 StAG descent route, the §5 StAG declaration route, or another pathway applies.

Please submit your details below.


Your Eligibility status

The ancestor-level chain appears to be intact, which is a good sign. However, we still need to verify whether your parent retained their German citizenship at the time of your birth.

Our legal team can help investigate this. Even if the parent lost citizenship, Article 116 or §14 StAG may still provide a pathway.

Please submit your details below.


This automated preliminary assessment is provided for informational purposes only. It is based exclusively on user input and does not constitute legal advice within the meaning of applicable professional regulations. No mandate or attorney-client relationship is established through the use of this tool. Any legally binding evaluation requires an individual review and written engagement.

For a legally reliable assessment of your individual situation, we recommend booking a personal consultation with one of our qualified legal professionals.

Notes on the use of this form

Please read these instructions carefully before sending.

What this form does - and doesn't do

This form serves as an initial guide. It automatically analyses your information and shows whether one of the possible legal bases for acquiring German citizenship could apply to your situation. An individual legal examination does not take place.

In particular, the following legal bases may be considered:

  • § 4 StAG - Acquisition of citizenship by descent from a German parent. Whether the chain is broken cannot be conclusively assessed on the basis of form entries alone. More on this in Guide to German citizenship by descent.
  • § 5 StAG - Acquisition by declaration in the event of previous gender-related discrimination, for example if citizenship was not passed on because of a German mother (before 1975) or an illegitimate German father (before 1993). This option only applies until 19 August 2031.
  • § 14 StAG - Discretionary naturalisation in the case of special ties to Germany, even without permanent residence in Germany. One of the requirements is a proven public interest.
  • Art. 116 para. 2 GG - Compensation for persons who were expatriated between 1933 and 1945 for political, racial or religious reasons, as well as for their descendants.

The preliminary result

The result displayed is an automated initial assessment - no more and no less. It is based solely on the information you provide. Documents, birth or marriage registers, historical archive documents or official records are not checked.

Even small temporal shifts - such as the exact date of birth of a parent, the date of naturalisation abroad or the order of marriage and birth - can determine whether an entitlement exists or not. The form cannot replace this precision.

Formulations such as „You could potentially be eligible“ or „An in-depth legal review is recommended“ are not just a catch-all phrase - they reflect the actual status of the examination. Nationality law contains numerous historical special regulations and transitional provisions that cannot be fully covered by an automated query.

No legal advice

The use of this form does not replace individual legal advice. A legally sound assessment requires the examination of all relevant documents and specific circumstances by an authorised lawyer.

Information on the field of activity Aliens and nationality law and to the person of Lawyer Helmer Tieben can be found on the corresponding pages of this website.

No client relationship

Completing and sending this form does not constitute an attorney-client relationship. Such a relationship only arises when

  1. an explicit order has been placed and
  2. this has been confirmed in writing.

Until then, all communication is non-binding.

Your confirmation before sending

A confirmation is required before your details are transmitted. By doing so, you declare that you have taken note of the following:

  • The result is a non-binding initial assessment based on your own information.
  • No legal advice is provided.
  • The use of the form does not constitute an attorney-client relationship.

This confirmation provides clarity - for you and for us.

Supplementary legal notice

Below the form you will find a separate note on liability and the scope of the automated preliminary check. Please read it as well.

This form provides initial guidance. A binding assessment of your specific situation is only possible in the context of an individual examination by a qualified lawyer.

If the result of the preliminary assessment raises questions or you would like a binding assessment, you can arrange a consultation directly.

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Helmer Tieben

I am Helmer Tieben, LL.M. (International Tax), a lawyer who has been admitted to the Cologne Bar Association since 2005. I specialise in landlord and tenant law, employment law, migration law and digital law and advise both local and international clients. With a Master's degree from the University of Melbourne and many years of experience in leading law firms, I offer clear and effective legal solutions. You can also contact me via
Reach Xing Helmer Tieben
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