German Citizenship Restoration (StAG §15 / Persecution Descendants)
- Max stay
- 9999days
- Processing
- 365–1095days
- Fee
- €255.00≈ $299.90
Difficulty3/10·Realism9/10Why? ▾
Difficulty
Heavy paperworkLots of documentation, eligibility thresholds, or a sponsor required. Start months ahead and consider professional advice.
Why this score?
- —Embassy/consulate visa application
- +1Strong baseline access — visa-free tourism eases the application footprint
- -2Long processing time (up to 1095 days)
- -1Long documentation list (8 items)
Approval realism
Approval is likelyMost applicants with the right paperwork get approved.
What drives this score?
- —Embassy visa applications generally succeed when documentation is complete and ties to home are clear
- +1.5Visa-free baseline access — approval rates are routinely high for this passport
Step-by-step checklist
Your application checklist
- 1
Check your passport validity
1673+ days beforeMost countries require 6+ months of validity beyond your travel dates and at least one blank page. If it's close, renew before applying.
- 2
Gather supporting documents
1657+ days beforeYou'll need: Two main routes:; (A) StAG §15 — descendant of persons persecuted by the Nazi regime 1933–1945 on political, racial or religious grounds (Article 116(2) Basic Law); (B) StAG §5 — child of a German parent born between 1949 and 1974 to a German MOTHER married to a non-German father (historic gender discrimination remedy); Naturalisation Reform 2024: Germany now broadly permits dual citizenship — earlier renunciation requirement removed; and others (see full list above).
- 3
Submit the application to the embassy or consulate
1643+ days beforeIn person at the consulate with jurisdiction over your residence. Bring originals + photocopies of every document. Most consulates require a prior appointment.
- 4
Track the application; print the approval
7+ days beforeDecisions typically take 365–1095 days. Print or save a clear PDF of the approved visa — airlines check this at check-in.
- 5
On the day of travel
day of travelCarry: passport (printed visa if applicable), onward ticket, proof of accommodation, proof of funds, travel insurance. Border officers retain discretion regardless of visa status.
Show full requirements, fees, and source
What you need
- Two main routes:
- (A) StAG §15 — descendant of persons persecuted by the Nazi regime 1933–1945 on political, racial or religious grounds (Article 116(2) Basic Law)
- (B) StAG §5 — child of a German parent born between 1949 and 1974 to a German MOTHER married to a non-German father (historic gender discrimination remedy)
- Naturalisation Reform 2024: Germany now broadly permits dual citizenship — earlier renunciation requirement removed
- Apostilled documents proving the chain back to the German-born ancestor
- Proof of persecution for StAG §15 (Jewish community records, expulsion documents, archive records)
- Application at BVA (Federal Office of Administration) or your nearest German consulate
- Typical processing 1–3 years (significant backlogs since 2024 reform)
Fee breakdown
- Naturalisation / restoration fee€255.00≈ $299.90

