How to Obtain Italian Citizenship by Descent in 2024 the Easy Way

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • Learn more about how to obtain Italian Citizenship by Descent in 2024. Discover the step-by-step process for obtaining Italian Citizenship by Descent.
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    0:12 Citizenship By Ancestry
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    John Palumbo - johnpalumbo.com/
    Welcome to Live And Invest Overseas (www.liveandinv..., the world’s savviest source for top opportunities to live better, retire in style, invest for profit, do business, and own real estate overseas. Established in 2008, Live And Invest Overseas is the vision of Publisher Kathleen Peddicord.
    Kathleen Peddicord has covered the live and invest overseas beat for more than 35 years and is considered the world’s foremost authority on overseas retirement. Along with her husband, Lief Simon, she has traveled to more than 75 countries, invested in real estate in 24, established businesses in 7, renovated historic properties in 6, and educated her children in 4. Kathleen has moved children, staff, enterprises, household goods, and pets across three continents, from the East Coast of the United States to Waterford, Ireland...then to Paris, France... and on to Panama City, Panama.
    Kathleen has written several books and memoirs on expat life including, How To Retire Overseas, At Home In Ireland, and At Home At Los Islotes.
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    Today, Kathleen and Lief divide their time between Paris and Panama. In Panama, they call the western Pacific coast of the country’s Azuero Peninsula home. There, on their 215-acre former cattle ranch, Los Islotes ( www.losislotes... ), they’re building a private community with all the comforts and amenities of 21st-century living in the most beautiful natural setting imaginable.

Комментарии • 30

  • @DR-or6tf
    @DR-or6tf 2 месяца назад +9

    Proving your bloodline is relatively easy. The real difficulty is getting an appointment to present your documents at an Italian consulate. It can take years to get the appointment

  • @discoverglobeliving
    @discoverglobeliving 7 месяцев назад +2

    Great tips! Obtaining Italian citizenship by descent seems fascinating. Simplifying the process is a game-changer. Thanks for sharing this valuable information!

  • @justlivingthatketolife
    @justlivingthatketolife 5 месяцев назад +17

    The American Dream: To Leave America. LOL.
    Sicilian here, and hopefully one of my Bloodlines comes thru.

    • @DamienLavizzo
      @DamienLavizzo 2 месяца назад

      The American Dream these days is to make enough money to leave haha, I totally agree with you. Make your American USD and take it somewhere the quality of life is better.

    • @estatesales9818
      @estatesales9818 Месяц назад

      It's the new saying. I'm leaving too lol

    • @jaredwarner2451
      @jaredwarner2451 Месяц назад +1

      True… I left 3 years ago and will never return as a resident.

  • @DeneenAlvarez
    @DeneenAlvarez 9 месяцев назад +2

    Just saw this video on RUclips and it gave me some great pointers. Have been considering dual citizenship myself through my great-grandfather and grandfather.

  • @Ivan.Marky88
    @Ivan.Marky88 3 месяца назад +3

    My GGF was Italian and through that connection I'd like to request IT citizenship. However, all papers were lost in WWI, WWII and Balkans wars. I don't even have his birth certificate. I'm pretty sure documents were lost in IT during time, as well. I don't know much about my GGF so I can't provide info. Should I keep on going that way, or simply quit and go for another visa type? Thanks! 😊

    • @zeitgeist888
      @zeitgeist888 13 дней назад

      I am going through the process now using my GGF. I ordered all birth marriage and death certificates here in the US through state records divisions and federal documents through USCIS and NARA. The Italian records I used 007 who finds records in Italy at communes and churches as needed. I started with no records and misinformation from family so it doesn't hurt to try. I started by looking at ship manifest from Ellis Island archives online and found when my GGF came over and a year later his wife and son. The dates, city they came from and where in the US they were headed helped a ton. No marriage certificate at the commune but the church had records which work if stamped by church and diocese.

  • @DeneenAlvarez
    @DeneenAlvarez 9 месяцев назад +2

    Any information on how much it cost in total if it's a simple case of bloodline?

    • @anatureofthings
      @anatureofthings 7 месяцев назад +1

      best estimate if not hiring a company to do all the work - around $2K. Certified Docs, Translation, Application, Lawyers...etc

    • @LittleIronFilms
      @LittleIronFilms 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@anatureofthings what is the process of doing it yourself that would make it this much cheaper? every company I see is quoting 10k-15k to do it all which is very expensive for us! Not sure what I could do myself to get that price down and who to work with

  • @chipsellarole267
    @chipsellarole267 8 месяцев назад +3

    My great grand father, great grand mother and my grand mother were born in Italy, my grand father was born here. Do I have a chance.

    • @geridelbello4480
      @geridelbello4480 8 месяцев назад

      Absolutely yes, you need to find the birth certificate of your emigrant ancestor.
      Un saluto a tutti i fratelli italiani d'America!

    • @anatureofthings
      @anatureofthings 7 месяцев назад

      You need to submit for record of naturalization for your grandfather through USCIS. www.uscis.gov/g-1566 That is the absolute first step. If no record, they will say there is no record. If he was naturalized you wont qualify. Qualifying through a women is a whole other ball of wax. this video has holes all through it. You all need a whole hell of a lot more than just the brith certificate of your emigrant ancestor. You'll need birth, marriage, and death certs of the line you follow. I wouldn't use this video as much of a reference

    • @EstuardoFloresTello
      @EstuardoFloresTello 3 месяца назад

      When your grandma was born? And when were you born? I'm asking this bc this is key in your process

    • @chipsellarole267
      @chipsellarole267 3 месяца назад

      @@EstuardoFloresTello grandma born in 1900. I was born 1957.

    • @laviniaalexander1509
      @laviniaalexander1509 2 месяца назад

      My mother was born in Trieste, Italy, in 1928. She married my father in 1955 in Trieste and moved to the US with him. (He was in the US Army COE.) I was born in Indiana in 1956. My mom became a US citizen in 1959. I have her birth certificate and naturalization certificate. Am I eligible for Italian citizenship? From research I’ve done, I believe I am. Thank you.

  • @Deborah986
    @Deborah986 5 месяцев назад +1

    My Father was born I. southern Italy but got naturalized I his early 20’s - my Grandmother came here from Italy and I don’t believe ever renounced her Italian citizenship. Am I still able to qualify for dual citizenship?

    • @michaelfisher18
      @michaelfisher18 5 месяцев назад

      If you were born after your father naturalized then probably not

  • @norfolkbushmanandfriends7916
    @norfolkbushmanandfriends7916 2 месяца назад

    My father was born in Turin in 1947. He came here with his mother (italian) & father (english) in 1949
    Do i have a chance?

    • @GigW
      @GigW Месяц назад +1

      Did your dad naturalize as a U.S. citizen?

  • @davewright8492
    @davewright8492 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hello - Great information. Who was the person (Ray ?) and the company (Italmee?) John mentioned? Thank you

  • @mrssaucedo1993
    @mrssaucedo1993 7 месяцев назад

    Info needed also

  • @salvatoreemma
    @salvatoreemma 6 месяцев назад +1

    I'm trying to get the Italian citizenship by descent correct. Please some help:
    My great-grandfather was born in Sicily in 1892 and came to America in 1910. He wasn't naturalized. He married another unnaturalized Italian in 1915 and gave birth to my grandfather in 1918. My grandfather married an Italian descent American and gave birth in 1944 to my mother (an only child). My mother was impregnated by an Italian man but they never married, and his name wasn't put on my birth certificate. Based on this narrative, might I be eligible to be an Italian citizen by descent?
    Thank you!

    • @GigW
      @GigW Месяц назад +1

      If your great-grandfather did not naturalized after coming here you have a great chance to get your italian citizenship through him. Seems easier than through your father since he is not on your birth certificate. No sure if you have any contact with him. Maybe start by localizing evidence that your great grandfather never naturalized. “In order to be recognized as an Italian citizen, applicants have to prove that their Italian ancestor born in Italy did not acquire another citizenship (US or other) before his son/daughter's birth in the USA/other country abroad” “ask for a Naturalization Records from USCIS or NARA” If he did not naturalize, start collecting birth certificates, marriage, divorce, death, etc There are tons of you tube videos with guidance on how to do it yourself.

  • @truthteller6743
    @truthteller6743 2 месяца назад

    My parents had to renounce their Italian Citizenship to obtain a Canadian one back in 1964. Due to that, I can't become an Italian Citizen by decent.

  • @RonM-se9ov
    @RonM-se9ov Месяц назад +1

    Title of this video doesn't match the content. I was looking for guidance, not a personal story.

  • @dt2775
    @dt2775 4 месяца назад +1

    Not true, a pledge allegiance was normal process that's not why. He had to renounce Italy because it was the way America was then. No dual citizenship. They embraced America, unlike many legal and illegal immigrants do today.