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Am I reading this right? Why on this good green earth would you think you, as a citizen (national) would be restricted in your own country? Unless Germany has some funky-mule system that I don't know about.Corndog wrote:Hi,
I have two questions, the first probably being fairly obvious.
I have a German passport but live in England and would like to know of any restrictions that I might have with regards to working and living in Germany.
And my second question is regarding a friend of mine who is a US citizen who is thinking about joining me on my adventure. I would like to know of the rules for americans with regards to living and working in Germany. I.e how long they can stay on a visitors visa and whether they need a work permit etc
thanks
None. As a German you can go home any time you like.Corndog wrote:Hi,
I have two questions, the first probably being fairly obvious.
I have a German passport but live in England and would like to know of any restrictions that I might have with regards to working and living in Germany.
Naturalisation (or naturalization) is simply the process by which a non-citizen becomes a citizen and gains the rights and duties of citizenship, the same as "natural"-born citizens.Corndog wrote:naturalization mean? and what benefits would I have, or what would be the purpose? Is there a certain amount of time I have to have stayed outside the country for them to take this right away from me? Or is it if I apply for citizenship somewhere else?
That depends on the countries involved and the circumstances.Corndog wrote:So does this mean that I can only be a citizen of one country?
You may be a British citizen already. When were you born? If born in 1983 or after, was one of your parents a British citizen or otherwise deemed to be "settled" in the UK?Corndog wrote:I was born in the UK but have never had a UK passport. I did realize that I was only allowed to vote for the local elections and not the national ones.
I would think, then, that, if your parents were married, you are a British citizen from birth, because birth in in the UK in 1984 to an Irish citizen parent confers British citizenship.Corndog wrote:I was born in the UK in 1984 and my Father is Irish and my mother is German, they have both lived England for over 20 years.
You can have as many passports as the countries you are a citizen of. Countries that allow dual citizenship are not usually worried about multiple citizenship. However, not all countries allow dual citizenship, and others allow it only in some circumstances.Corndog wrote:Thanks. I just don't want to lose any of my rights that I have. And want to know if I have the same rights in Germany as in the UK. On a seperate note, what is the maximum amount of passports you are allowed to have, and are they all linked. What I mean by this is say I was refused entry somewhere on one, could I try again on another?
That would depend on how competently the country in question kept records and how assiduously the records were applied at the point of entry. Whether it would be legal or not would be dubious in many cases, even if it were possible in practice.Corndog wrote:With regards to the refusal question, there is nothing specific. I was just think if I could say go to a country that required a visa and had a 90 day limit, and then return on the other one for an additional 90 days.
I think you are probably both. If you are a British citizen (not an English citizen, and it seems as if you are a British citizen), you can simply apply for a British passport (with the relevant documentation). Germany is not relaxed about dual citizenship for its citizens; what I don't know is whether applying for a British passport would mean an automatic loss of your German citizenship: my suspicion is not, but you would want to be certain, I imagine, one way or the other before you made any such move. Again, someone is likely to be along here who can answer that question.Corndog wrote:As to losing my rights, I'm just really unsure of whether I am a German citizen or an English one, or both.
That is definitely not true. In your case, as noted above, I think the question of how many nationalities you hold (and therefore how many passports you can have) hinges on the German view of things: two (British and Irish) or three (British, Irish and German).Corndog wrote:I thought I was a triple national, but have also been told that I can only have one or two passports.
In truth, whilst you may be entitled to apply for all these passports, it might not be necessary. If you want to live/work/study in the EU/EEA, then any one of those passports will do.Corndog wrote:I thought I was a triple national, but have also been told that I can only have one or two passports. I'm just weighing up my options. Thanks for your help.
Even if parents were never married, he is still a British citizen automatically as in 1984 (right up until October 2000), German citizens were considered to be "settled" in the United Kingdom. Except special cases like diplomats or visiting forces.Christophe wrote: I would think, then, that, if your parents were married, you are a British citizen from birth, because birth in in the UK in 1984 to an Irish citizen parent confers British citizenship.
As far as I know, it is not a problem.I don't believe that applying for a passport of a country you already hold the citizenship of would affect your German citizenship, but you might want to check that.
The United Kingdom does not work like that. The United States does, although there are foreign income exclusions and foreign tax credits.sakura wrote:The bad thing is if you had to pay tax even when working outside the country, and maybe to both (or more) nations. I think the UK works like that, no? Or is it the US...
Does Germany work like that?JAJ wrote:The United Kingdom does not work like that. The United States does, although there are foreign income exclusions and foreign tax credits.sakura wrote:The bad thing is if you had to pay tax even when working outside the country, and maybe to both (or more) nations. I think the UK works like that, no? Or is it the US...
There is absolutely nothing legally preventing you from using one passport to enter and leave the USA and then using another one to do the same again. As long as you always leave the USA with the same passport that you entered on you will be OK.sakura wrote:If you're planning on doing something dodgy like fly to the US on one passport, leave and then return immediately using another one- as mentioned before they might not flag anything up, but if they take your prints, you'd be busted.
Hmm...so I can hold 3 passports and spend x number of days in the US, visit Canada/Mexico and then come back the very next day, using a different passport?Dawie wrote:There is absolutely nothing legally preventing you from using one passport to enter and leave the USA and then using another one to do the same again. As long as you always leave the USA with the same passport that you entered on you will be OK.sakura wrote:If you're planning on doing something dodgy like fly to the US on one passport, leave and then return immediately using another one- as mentioned before they might not flag anything up, but if they take your prints, you'd be busted.
Leaving the United States to go to Canada, Mexico, Bermuda or an adjacent island does not reset the period of admission as a tourist.sakura wrote: Hmm...so I can hold 3 passports and spend x number of days in the US, visit Canada/Mexico and then come back the very next day, using a different passport?
As long as this is clearly written....where are my passports!
I hadn't assumed it wasn't possible, just thought it might be a grey area and a new "test case law" or something. I did assume, though, that VWPs applied per person, not per nationality - i.e. physical presence.