Finnish citizenship is granted by the Finnish Immigration Service on application or by declaration.
Under the current Citizenship Act which entered into force in 2003, a child of a Finnish citizen acquires Finnish citizenship at birth by virtue of law. (This is called the parentage principle.) However, Finnish citizenship is not automatically transferred to a child born abroad and out of wedlock to a Finnish father or to a child born abroad to a Finnish non-birth mother. The parentage principle is applied in accordance with the provisions of the Citizenship Act that were in force at the time the child was born.
A child can acquire Finnish citizenship on the basis of his or her parents’ marriage if the father was a Finnish citizen at the time of the child’s birth and has been a Finnish citizen ever since. If, however, paternity is established after the contraction of the marriage and the father is still a Finnish citizen, the child may acquire Finnish citizenship only as of the date on which paternity is established.
In some rare cases, a child may obtain Finnish citizenship on the basis of being born in Finland if the child would otherwise remain stateless.
A citizenship declaration is a way of obtaining Finnish citizenship that is reserved for certain specific applicant groups.
Finnish citizenship can be obtained by declaration if, for instance, the applicant is:
- a former Finnish citizen
- a citizen of a Nordic country or
- a young person between 18 and 22 years of age who has lived in Finland for a sufficient time.
The Finnish Immigration Service does not have discretionary powers when processing citizenship declarations: Finnish citizenship will always be granted on the basis of a declaration if the applicant meets the requirements.
Applicants who cannot obtain Finnish citizenship by declaration may acquire Finnish citizenship on application. In order to get a positive decision on the citizenship application, the applicant must meet the requirements for naturalisation.
There are following requirements for acquiring Finnish citizenship on application:
- established identity
- sufficient language skills
- sufficient period of residence
- integrity
- means of support
- fulfilled payment obligations.
One of the requirements for becoming a Finnish citizen is that the applicant has at least satisfactory skills in one of the following languages:
- spoken and written Finnish
- spoken and written Swedish
- Finnish Sign Language
- Finland-Swedish Sign Language.
See how applicants can prove their language skills.
In some cases, an exception to the language skills requirement may be made, but exceptions are rare. Read more about exceptions to the language skills requirement.
One of the requirements for becoming a Finnish citizen is meeting the integrity requirement. Committing crimes or having a valid restraining order may prevent the applicant from obtaining Finnish citizenship.
When assessing whether citizenship can be granted, the Finnish Immigration Service considers the nature of the criminal offences, the recurrence of the criminal activity, the seriousness of the crimes and the time that has passed since the offences were committed. Fixed fines, which are imposed for less severe offences, do not prevent the acquisition of Finnish citizenship.
The offences that may lead to being denied Finnish citizenship are less severe than the offences that will lead to deportation. A negative citizenship decision does not automatically lead to consideration of deportation.
Read more about the impact of crimes on obtaining Finnish citizenship.
Under the current Citizenship Act, a Finnish citizen does not lose his or her Finnish citizenship when he or she becomes a citizen of another country. Correspondingly, foreign nationals do not need to give up their current citizenship in order to become Finnish citizens. However, some countries may require their citizens to renounce their original citizenship if they acquire the citizenship of a foreign country.
Finnish citizenship can be lost:
- utomatically when turning 22 years of age if the person in question also has a citizenship of another country and has not had a sufficient connection to Finland. Read more about losing Finnish citizenship at the age of 22.
- by a person who has become a Finnish citizen on application or by declaration and has given false or misleading information. However, losing one’s Finnish citizenship is not possible if the matter concerning loss of citizenship has become pending more than 5 years after the decision on citizenship was made.
- by a person who has obtained Finnish citizenship on the basis of his or her father’s citizenship but the paternity is later annulled.
A Finnish citizen may also request to be released from his or her Finnish citizenship if he or she is (or is about to become) a citizen of another country. Finnish citizenship can be re-acquired.
No. Finnish passports are issued to Finnish citizens by the police or by the Finnish missions (embassies or consulates) abroad.
Citizenship status means present and former citizenship, statelessness or citizenship being unknown. Determination of citizenship status means investigating and determining the citizenship status of a person. The Finnish Immigration Service determines a person’s citizenship status at the request of a public authority or at the request of the party concerned.