By Anastasia C. Miliou, Court of Appeals Lawyer

Those with Greek lineage can get Greek citizenship very easily

The roots of the Greek family are deep and transcend time. Second and third-generation Greeks born abroad keep Greece’s customs and tradition and even speak the Greek language, but this doesn’t mean that Greek citizenship is a matter of course.

The way someone can get Greek citizenship isn’t challenging, but neither is widely known.

We can begin by finding the last ancestor born anywhere in Greece whose birth certificate can be traced. If the ancestor is a father or a mother, then the process is straightforward. If the ancestor is a grandfather or great-grandfather, then the search can go as far back as the Boys Records (Mitroon Arenon) that covered archives as far back as the final decades of 1800.

If we have a birth certificate or documentation from the Boys Records, we can gather the rest of the paperwork needed.

For instance, if the grandfather was the ancestor born in Greece, then it is necessary to find the religious marriage certificate of that relative (if he is male, we need the marriage to be orthodox religious, if she is female, the marriage must not be orthodox religious), regardless as to whether the marriage took place in Greece or abroad, followed by the birth certificate and marriage certificate of the parent whose lineage is Greek followed by the citizenship applicant’s birth certificate.

In their original forms, the documents need to be translated to Greek, either by an embassy or a lawyer who knows the language in which they are written. The applicants need to sign a series of documents required for Greek citizenship at the embassy of their place of residence. All the documents are then gathered and sent to the region where the Greek ancestor lived.

From there, an act certifying Greek nationality status is sent with a file to the relevant municipality for enrolment. As soon as the applicant is enrolled at the Municipality, Greek citizenship and a passport become a matter of course.

Minors automatically receive citizenship parallel to the parent who has a right to it. If they become of age, they need to submit a different application.

If any certificate is missing, there is a way of naturalization. Still, in that case, the applicant will be interviewed at some point by the Council in the Greek language, and he/she must know about Greek history and the present political, financial and social situation in the country. This procedure takes more time, but the final result is the same.

About the author

Anastasia Chr. Miliou is a solicitor of the senior Courts of Greece. She was duly admitted as a solicitor in March 2000 and holds a current practicing certificate authorizing her to practice law in Greece. Her law office is located in Athens Greece and in the last decade she handles cases of Greeks that live outside of Greece. She has excellent knowledge of Greek citizenship’s procedures, inheritances’ laws, properties, banks’ and taxes’ issues, family matters, name’s changes, etc. For more information visit her website at legalaction.gr or her Facebook page Anastasia Miliou Law office.