English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have read all your answers, i have even contacted the ambessy in germany. I understand that under current law i am a us citizen and a german citizen. My mother was born over ther and after marring my father moved over to the US. Now my question is, I am 23 and living in the US. I have just got out of the military of the us in april of this year. I am not in the reserves. I am compltley out and can not go back in. I want to apply for dual citizen ship, am i quailfied and if yes how would i apply. I can find not answers to getiing paper work to apply for dual citizen ship. i was born in trhe US. My mother still has her alien card and always uses her german passport when intering germany. My grand mother still lives in Pirmanses. It says that regardless of where i was born i will retain my dual citizienship my enitre life. I want that paper work though and the passport. Please help me. I can find no links for the forms.

2006-12-14 03:40:02 · 3 answers · asked by jewlz c 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

3 answers

I only know that if you want citizenship of another country then go to that country (Germany) and just apply for a passport there, you will not have to give up your American passport and in the end you will have 2 passports and 2 citizenships. I don't think you actually apply for dual, you just become dual by having two passports.

2006-12-14 04:18:53 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

While Germany acknowledges the idea of twin nationality, for so much functions it considers a twin country wide in Germany a German citizen most effective. Thus, the potential of the U.S. Embassy and consulates to furnish help to an American-German twin country wide in Germany is also constrained. The opposite is right within the U.S., wherein any such man or woman is viewed most effective American for so much functions. Both nations have distinct legislation touching on twin nationals. American-German twin nationals might owe taxes in each nations. They need to dossier an annual U.S. sales tax go back, without reference to whether they owe taxes to the U.S. or pay taxes somewhere else. And they need to have a legitimate U.S. passport to be able to input the United States. An American-German male need to check in with the U.S. Selective Service System inside 3 months of his eighteenth birthday, and isn't always exempt from German navy carrier. None of that, nevertheless, impacts his twin citizenship

2016-09-03 17:14:42 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Go to www.uscis.gov for all your immigration questions.

2006-12-14 03:56:15 · answer #3 · answered by Rooster 1972 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers