An Irish passport is one of the most sought-after travel documents in the world.
I have both Irish and English citizenship and have always used the Irish passport in preference.
It's kitschy but true; being Irish is seen as being more, well, likeable or something.
The easiest way to get an Irish passport of course is to be born in Ireland.
But, if you drew the short straw on that one, you're going to need an Irish parent or an Irish grandparent.
If you have an Irish great-grandparent you need to satisfy the following requirements;
There are two circumstances under which a great-grandchild is eligible to apply for Irish citizenship by descent:
The Irish Consulate in New York explained that the parent would need to be registered in the "Foreign Birth Register" which is held at the Consulate, effectively a listing of those of Irish citizens born abroad who are entitled to Irish citizenship who have their births "registered."
A practical use of an Irish passport is that you will be entitled to work and travel freely in any of the 27 countries in the European Union.
You won’t need a work permit for this – and once you have worked in a European Union county for a certain length of time, you will be entitled to unemployment compensation, health care and pension rights.
How else then can you get an Irish passport? Getting a passport is really the easy part – it’s getting Irish citizenship that takes a little time.
Born in Ireland
To get an Irish passport, you must first become an Irish citizen. Fortunately, Americans can hold dual citizenship, as can Irish, so there’s no conflict there.
Let’s look at the scenarios that allow you to claim Irish citizenship.
Anyone born in Ireland before January 1, 2005 is an Irish citizen. After that date, it is not automatic, and the citizenship and residency history of both parents is taken into account.
Marriage to Irish citizen
You are also entitled to Irish citizenship if you are married to an Irish citizen.
To claim citizenship by marriage, you must meet the following conditions: you must be married to an Irish citizen for at least three years; you must have had one year of "continuous residence" on the island of Ireland immediately before the date of your application; and finally, you must have been living on the island of Ireland for at least two of the four years before that year of continuous residence.
If you were born outside of Ireland and either your mother or father (or both) was an Irish citizen at the time of your birth, then you are entitled to Irish citizenship.
Permanent residency
If you have been a permanent resident in Ireland, you can try to become a citizen through naturalization. You will need to have lived permanently in Ireland for the previous five years, be over 18 and not have a criminal record.
But let’s face it – living in Ireland for five years is a lot of effort just to get that Irish passport. A much better way to get an Irish passport is to have at least one Irish grandparent. And by Irish, we mean an Irish grandparent who was or is an Irish citizen.
Irish grandparents
What to do next?
After getting an Irish grandparent, the next thing to do is to call an Irish consulate and ask them to send you an application form. There are Irish consulates in most of the major U.S cities. They should also be able to advise you on getting the right documentation in order for your application.
You’ll need a copy of your grandparent’s birth certificate from Ireland. If you don’t have a copy you can get one from the General Registry Office in Dublin. (Click here to go to their Web site.)
You will also need: Your grandparent's certificate of marriage; your parents' birth and marriage certificates; and an original death certificate for any of these relatives who have passed away. If the grandparent is deceased, you’ll need to show a certified copy of their death certificate, and if alive, a current official I.D. (such as a driver’s license or passport.)
To access the Irish documents, it will help you to know as much information about where and when your Irish grandparent was born, which may involve some genealogy research.
If one of your parents is Irish, and you would like to get an Irish passport, the process is easier. You need: their marriage certificate; a current official I.D; a copy of their death certificate if your Irish parent has passed away, a full long-form birth certificate of your Irish parent, showing your grandparents’ names, places of birth and ages at birth.
You will also need: your own long-form birth certificate; documentation to show that you have changed your name, such as a marriage certificate, if this has happened; a notarized copy of your current passport, and at least three other notarized copies of proofs of identity, one of which must be a photo I.D; a bank/utility statement with your current address; and two signed passport photos.
Once you have established your Irish citizenship – which can take up to 18 months to process – you can apply for an Irish passport. This can take up to six weeks to process and you can do this through your nearest Irish consulate.
And then, you too can sashay through the EU passport section at Dublin airport after the overnight flight from New York!
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.jkennedym | Mar 27, 2012, 07:28 PM EDT
hi there how can a great grandchild apply If you have an Irish great-grandparent you need to satisfy the following requirements; There are two circumstances under which a great-grandchild is eligible to apply for Irish citizenship by descent can you please let me know how to find papers needed to try and how and where can i find birth and death records thanks Jackie
sirpeter | Mar 26, 2012, 01:12 PM EDT
angrypaddy."Show me your friends and i'll tell you what your like" So your friends are still delusional and you are now???Angry and delusional.You should have stayed.lol
ciaradexy | Mar 26, 2012, 11:51 AM EDT
Angry, So you experienced irish people moving to the US who integrated into the American way of life? Fair play to them. I have a very good job in the medical field and I get paid very well thanks. I have been offered jobs in BC, CA and Sydney but as I have a job, Im staying at home as this is where Im from. I have no need or want to emigrate. IrelandNorth-why would some one whose family left 200 years ago be more entitled to citizenship than someone who pays tax here, pays a mortgage or rent and has their family here?
IrelandNorth | Mar 26, 2012, 07:02 AM EDT
ciara! You're using the cosy collective pronoun "we/us" again without at least this particular franchisees suffrage. I don't recall seeing your name on my last electoral polling card. "I" before "we" except after plea! Irish citizenship NOW for all Irish-Americans. They have more right to be in the old country than EU sponsored east-Europeaners.
ciaradexy | Mar 25, 2012, 06:24 PM EDT
And i speak French, does this make me French? We arent restricted by language because we dont choose to go to non English speaking countries! We speak English so it makes sense to go to English speaking countries however, i have many friends who live in Spain and Luxembourg. They moved there through choice and learned the language. I have never met an irish person who decided against moving to Italy or Spain etc because they didnt have the language. They took lessons and moved over there! Not having the language did not stop them moving just like many non-English speakers move to Ireland to work and learn the language. It didnt restrict them either. My Swedish mates arent claiming to be more Irish than someone like you. WE view them as 'more irish' than you because they are part of our society and live with us.
Curitiba | Mar 25, 2012, 06:04 PM EDT
I really like Ikea furniture. Does this make me Swedish?
Curitiba | Mar 25, 2012, 05:38 PM EDT
"We dont speak Spanish or Italian! Thats why we go to Australia or the US", "We were never restricted by language" Make up your mind Ciara, are Irish-born people capable of learning a foreign language or not? I wonder if there are any long term Irish residents of Sweden who are going round claiming to be more Swedish than the Swedes?
ciaradexy | Mar 25, 2012, 04:00 PM EDT
Curitba, I have mates here who are from Sweden. They are here 6 years and are far more 'Irish' than anyone I have ever met in my life who has irish parents, grand parents etc but was born and raised in another country. They have immersed themselves in my country and assimilated/integrated with Irish people.
ciaradexy | Mar 25, 2012, 03:57 PM EDT
! We are an island nation who have always travelled. We were never restricted by language. A language can be picked up! You cannot force people to learn a language! There are lots of jobs here for people with a foreign language but the Irish don't have these languages because the Irish aren't interested in these languages! You cannot force us to learn languages we are not interested in! You had Irish girlfriends? I had English and Scottish boyfriends. It doesn't mean I'm suddenly up on how the entire English and Scottish nations feel. Meeting Irish people on holiday is not the same either and as for Irish pubs and clubs? So if someone in Madrid drinks in Irish pubs, they're suddenly all knowing? Gimme a break! It says on my passport-Born in Ireland. I was schooled in Ireland, first communion and confo in Ireland, I work in Ireland and pay my tax here. I AM Irish. Not the daughter of an irish couple or via heritage, just Irish. I also have a lot of English mates and I am in England at least once every 8 weeks or so and i can assure you, we have never discussed European languages or why most Irish arent arsed learning them.
ciaradexy | Mar 25, 2012, 03:56 PM EDT
Look at george telling everyone else about An Bród Club! I had to give you that information because you thought you already knew it all! And 'that guy' is Bernard Dunne. One of our best athletes but you wouldnt know that. You only know about Ireland in the 50's. Modern Ireland is of no interest to you. Yes Curitiba, you were here for a bit but you need to remember what you said to me on here a few months back! You didnt feel like you fit in. The Irish didnt view you as irish! You dont have a shared education, shared social scene, shared cities and the rest! You are aware that we learn foreign languages in school here? So if we fancied moving abroad to Spain, Italy, france or wherever then we could, yeah? You dont know the psyche of Irish people when it comes to emigration. You dont know how much a part of our being it is to go abroad for a few years whether it be for travel or to work. its who we are! When I was in school, I had school mates who wanted to work in Spain and Australia. They wanted to travel and work there so they did! Some had an interest in these languages. I know I had no interest in working in France so I didn't pay much attention but I have enough to get by on a trip or to ask for directions or whatever! The Irish are lucky that we have options!
jkennedym | Mar 25, 2012, 03:55 PM EDT
Hi i was looking for the forms to print out on how to get an Irish passport my Grandmother was born in Scotland and i don't know how to find forms and US phone numbers for the forms to get birth or even death records please help by emailing me forms to print and fill out and see if it's enough to get my Irish Passport i can't wait email to jkennedym@aol.com thanks Jackie McGowan / Smith back then my grandmother was
GeorgeDillon | Mar 25, 2012, 02:44 PM EDT
faberm: Sin smaoineamh an-shuimiúl. Ba chóir duit tuilleadh poiblíochta a lorg, téigh i gcaidreamh leis na heagraisí Gaeilge in Eirinn. Very interesting idea. I suggest you run it by some of the Irish language organizations in Ireland--Conradh na Gaeilge, Foras na Gaeilge etc. Also that guy who is running the BROD club. And maybe some of the politicians who pay lip service to the language. And write to Foinse, the newspaper. I'll start mentioning it in Irish language circles too. I don't expect much from the Irish, however, they're a pretty craven lot.
Curitiba | Mar 25, 2012, 02:10 PM EDT
Oh, and what with my parents being Irish, all my relatives being Irish, growing up in London with friends whose parents were all Irish, going to Irish pubs and clubs where the majority of people are Irish, having worked and studied with many Irish, having had quite a few Irish girlfriends and having lived in Ireland for a few years, I am wondering what you mean by "you do not know us"? I lived in Australia for six years, and have also visited America , so I also have "known" Irish people in those countries as well. Unless, of course, you mean that Irish people are no longer Irish when they step on that plane to wherever. So be careful visiting foreign countries,Ciara. Once you leave home, you're no longer Irish. And seeing as you told me once that you are about 35, and you spent 2 years in Australia, why that makes you only 94% Irish. So try not to go on holiday abroad or anything. I'd be most disappointed to see you get even less Irish! It all adds up.
Curitiba | Mar 25, 2012, 01:45 PM EDT
Ciara, sorry, but that is a stupid argument, but thank goodness you have expressed it here and not on the Telegraph or Daily Mail website. The English folk on there would have a field day laughing about "thick paddies" who can't learn simple foreign languages such as Spanish. Even the most uneducated Polish person has learned to speak English in their time in Ireland. Please don't tar all Irish people with the "we're no good at languages and we're proud of it" brush. I, for one learned to speak French to a very good standard when I was younger, but due to the fact there were no jobs in France, I didn't get to use it, and so I have forgotten a lot of it. 3 months on a language course and you'd have a working knowledge on the language. A year working in Brazil or Montreal and you'd be as fluent as you'd ever need to be. Please, Ciara "cop youself on" and don't embarrass us with the "we're too thick to speak foreign languages". Sheesh!
ciaradexy | Mar 25, 2012, 09:13 AM EDT
AngryPaddy, so youre not irish either? Shut up waffling about a country and a people you know nothing about. I lived in Australia for 2 years, dya reckon I can speak on behalf of the natives? Dont be a tool.
ciaradexy | Mar 25, 2012, 09:11 AM EDT
Faber, I speak some French. Thats ridiculous logic.
ciaradexy | Mar 25, 2012, 09:10 AM EDT
Curitiba, We dont speak Spanish or Italian! Thats why we go to Australia or the US. Are you just pretending to be dumb now? You dont know many irish people so you have no idea where or why they go anywhere. I have plenty of mates working in many non English speaking countries all over the world but the jobs they want are in English speaking countries. Use your head for feck sake! Stop talking about us like you know us. Thats one of the reasons Irish mock 'Irish' Americans. You do not know us so stop talking about us like you do. Why dont you ask an irish person why they moved to the country they are in instead of pretending that you already know the answer?
faberm1 | Mar 24, 2012, 10:28 PM EDT
If the Irish Government wishes to promote the Irish language, they could offer citizenship to people who could pass a certain level of proficiency in the Irish language. My family came from Ireland so long ago that I can't get a passport through grandparents. i would however like to take a test in Irish to try to obtain a passport.
Curitiba | Mar 24, 2012, 09:31 PM EDT
The only functioning economy in Europe is Britain's.
Curitiba | Mar 24, 2012, 09:31 PM EDT
Work in all 27 European states? That's a laugh. Most of them don't have functioning economies and the rest wouldn't employ you to clean a toilet unless you have native proficiency in their language, much less give you a job in the Mercedes or Citroen factory. If that weren't true, then why are so many Irish heading for Australia or begging to be let into America, and not to Milan or Madrid? Europe is NOT the USA
Seanmor | Mar 24, 2012, 07:24 PM EDT
Having been born in London to Irish parents, I had to obtain the birth cert. of one parent in the late 50s in order to obtain an Irish passport. People at both sides of the Irish Border can claim Irish citizenship and easily obtain Irish passports. In the early 90s, I read of a disgruntled Unionist in Belfast who got an Irish passport at the local Irish consulate. He then walked down the street proudly waveing his new acquisition and shouiting "Tiocfaidh ár lá". (Our day will come).
ShaneODowd | Mar 24, 2012, 03:22 PM EDT
your article states "Once you have established your Irish citizenship – which can take up to 18 months to process" You make the Irish passport office sound like it's run by a bunch of monkeys...with all required documents in order it takes no longer than a month. I had my passport in 10 days