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Under section 16(a) of the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act, your son could in theory be naturalised as an Irish citizen without needing to meet any residence requirements.rnc312 wrote:My wife is an Irish citizen (by descent) and our son and I are both American. Our son is unfortunately not entitled to Irish citizenship by descent because he was born prior to my wife being added to the foreign births registry.
We are considering a move to Ireland in a few years. From what I have read on here it sounds like it may take at least five to six years for me to obtain Irish citizenship by naturalization (including processing time).
What about our son? Being that my wife is already an Irish citizen, would she be allowed to apply for our minor son's naturalization once he met the residency requirement?
I read somewhere that a naturalization application on behalf of a child cannot be made until one of the parents has naturalized. Does that mean we cannot apply for my son's naturalization until I myself am granted citizenship?
Thank you!
rnc312 wrote:I have thought about Northern Ireland -- and England as well.
I guess we're persuaded to choose Ireland because our son would hopefully be able to qualify for free fees at an Irish university.
There is a citizenship and residence requirement for home fees status, as a general rule.rnc312 wrote:My son is four years old.
Is it true that the Irish government provides free tuition for Irish university undergraduate students if they are citizens of Ireland and meet the residency requirement prior to enrollment?
The U.K. government did the same for its college students, I believe, up until a few years ago ... or have I've been misinformed?