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German citizenship for children of German citizens born abroad

Child at an airport, © colourbox.de
The second generation born abroad after 2000 is not a German citizen automatically. Children born abroad to German parents who themselves were born abroad after 31.12.1999 will only become German if their birth was registered within one year from their date of birth.
Who is affected?
Your child does not become a German citizen automatically if
you (the German parent or parents) were born outside of Germany after 31 December 1999 and
your child was born outside of Germany and
you (the German parent or parents) were residing abroad at the time of birth (simply being registered in Germany while in fact living abroad does not suffice) and
your child does not become stateless.
How does my child become German?
Parents must apply for registration of birth either at the competent registrar's office in Germany or at a German Mission abroad within one year of the date of birth. The child will then obtain German citizenship.
Example
The German couple Anna and Bernd Müller move to Tanzania in 1999 and on 01.02.2000 their daughter Clara is born in Arusha. In 2020, Clara marries the Tanzanian citizen David and on 23.05.2023 their son Emil is born in Dar Es Salaam. Although his mother is German, Emil does not acquire German citizenship by birth, since he acquires the Tanzanian citizenship automatically at birth.
In order to obtain German citizenship for Emil, his parents would have to apply with the competent registry office in Germany or with the competent German mission abroad to register the birth of their child within one year.
It does not matter, whether Clara lived in Germany in between if she and her son were born abroad after 31.12.1999.
Who is not affected?
- children whose parents were born in Germany,
children whose parents were born before 01.01.2000, and
children born in Germany
will continue to become German citizens by birth.