What is Foreign Birth Registration?
The Foreign Births Register (FBR) is Ireland's official mechanism for recognizing Irish citizenship in people born outside the island of Ireland. Administered by the Department of Foreign Affairs, it's the pathway through which those with Irish ancestry can claim their birthright citizenship—no residency required, no language tests, no investment.
Unlike naturalization (which requires years of residence) or citizenship by investment (which requires substantial capital), FBR is about proving what you already are: Irish by descent. If you can document your lineage back to an Irish-born grandparent—or in some cases, even further—you're not applying to become Irish. You're applying for recognition of citizenship that has been yours all along.
"The demand for Irish citizenship through descent continues to grow," notes Fragomen, a leading immigration law firm. "The Irish passport has placed first overall as the strongest passport to obtain in 2025, and applications from the United States, the United Kingdom, and beyond continue to surge."
Why FBR Matters Now
Several factors have driven unprecedented interest in Irish citizenship by descent:
- Brexit consequences: British citizens lost automatic EU rights. Those with Irish heritage can reclaim them through FBR.
- Political uncertainty: Americans seeking a "Plan B" increasingly look to ancestry-based citizenship.
- Remote work revolution: An Irish passport unlocks the ability to live and work anywhere in the EU.
- Passport power: The Irish passport ranks among the world's strongest, with visa-free access to 176+ destinations.
- No investment required: Unlike Golden Visas or investment programs, FBR costs only €278.
According to Irish parliamentary records, approximately 45,000 FBR applications are currently in the system—36,000 being actively processed and 9,000 awaiting documentation from applicants. This represents a remarkable pipeline of people claiming their Irish heritage.
A Brief History of the Foreign Births Register
The Foreign Births Register was established under the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 1956, which codified how Irish citizenship passes through generations. The law recognized that the Irish diaspora—one of the world's largest relative to population—maintained deep connections to the homeland despite living abroad.
The system has evolved over decades, with significant improvements in recent years:
- 2019: Online application system launched at fbr.dfa.ie
- 2023: Processing times peaked at over 2.5 years due to demand
- 2024-2025: Significant investment in FBR Unit reduced times to ~9 months
- 2026: Continued improvements with digital document verification
Who Can Apply for Foreign Birth Registration?
Eligibility for FBR depends on your relationship to an Irish-born ancestor and whether certain registrations occurred in your family's chain of descent. The rules are precise—understanding them is the first step.
The Basic Rule: Grandparent Born in Ireland
According to Citizens Information Ireland: "You can become an Irish citizen if one of your grandparents was born on the island of Ireland."
This is the most straightforward path. If you have a grandparent (maternal or paternal) who was born anywhere on the island of Ireland—including Northern Ireland—you are likely eligible for Irish citizenship through FBR.
| Scenario | Eligible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Grandparent born in Ireland (Republic) | Yes | Standard FBR eligibility |
| Grandparent born in Northern Ireland | Yes | "Island of Ireland" includes NI |
| Parent born in Ireland | You're already Irish | No FBR needed—just apply for passport |
| Great-grandparent born in Ireland | Maybe | Only if parent was registered before your birth |
| Great-great-grandparent born in Ireland | No | Eligibility doesn't extend this far |
What Counts as "Born in Ireland"?
The term "island of Ireland" is legally significant. It includes:
- Republic of Ireland: All 26 counties
- Northern Ireland: All 6 counties (Antrim, Armagh, Down, Fermanagh, Londonderry, Tyrone)
This is particularly important post-Brexit. Under the Good Friday Agreement, people born in Northern Ireland can choose to be British, Irish, or both. If your grandparent was born in Belfast, Derry, or anywhere else in Northern Ireland, they were born on the island of Ireland—and you may be eligible for FBR.
The Parent Registration Path (Great-Grandparent Cases)
What if your Irish-born ancestor is a great-grandparent rather than a grandparent? This is where the generational chain becomes critical.
According to the Department of Foreign Affairs: "If your great-grandparent was born in Ireland and your parent registered with the Foreign Births Register before you were born, you will still qualify for Irish citizenship."
This is the key caveat. For great-grandparent claims, there must be an unbroken chain of registrations:
- Great-grandparent born in Ireland
- Grandparent registered on FBR (became Irish citizen)
- Parent registered on FBR before your birth
- You become eligible
If any link in this chain is missing—particularly if your parent didn't register before you were born—you are not eligible for standard FBR.
Citizenship by Association (Section 16)
What if you don't qualify through standard descent? Ireland offers a discretionary citizenship route called "Citizenship by Association" under Section 16 of the Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 1956.
According to Irish Dual Citizenship: "To qualify for Irish citizenship through great grandparents (by association), you need to be 18 or over, meet the residency requirements (approximately 3 years of lawful residency in Ireland), be of 'good character', and intend to live in Ireland."
This path requires actually living in Ireland—it's not an ancestry-only route like FBR. The Minister for Justice has discretion over these applications, and approval is not guaranteed.
The Generational Chain Explained
Understanding how Irish citizenship passes through generations is essential for determining your eligibility and—if you have children or plan to—ensuring the chain continues.
Generation 1: Born in Ireland
Your ancestor who was born on the island of Ireland is the foundation of your claim. This person was Irish by birth—no registration needed. They could be:
- A grandparent (most common FBR scenario)
- A great-grandparent (requires parent registration chain)
This person's Irish birth certificate is the anchor document for your entire application.
Generation 2: First Generation Born Abroad
If your grandparent was born in Ireland and had children abroad (your parent), those children are Irish citizens by descent—automatically. They don't strictly need to register, but registration creates documentation and maintains the chain for future generations.
Generation 3: Second Generation Born Abroad (You)
This is typically the FBR applicant. If your grandparent was born in Ireland, you're eligible for FBR registration. Once registered, you become an Irish citizen with full rights.
Generation 4: Third Generation Born Abroad (Your Children)
Here's where timing becomes critical. Your children are only eligible if you register on the FBR before they are born.
| Scenario | Your Child's Eligibility |
|---|---|
| You register FBR, then have a child | Child is eligible for FBR |
| You have a child, then register FBR | Child is NOT eligible for FBR |
| You don't register, your child can't either | Chain ends |
The Chain in Practice: Example Scenarios
Scenario 1: Classic Grandparent Case
- Mary was born in Cork, Ireland in 1935
- Mary emigrated to New York and had John in 1958 (John is Irish by descent)
- John married an American and had Sarah in 1985
- Sarah can apply for FBR based on Mary's Irish birth
Scenario 2: Successful Great-Grandparent Case
- Patrick was born in Dublin in 1910
- Patrick emigrated to Boston and had Michael in 1940
- Michael registered on FBR in 1965, becoming an Irish citizen
- Michael had Jennifer in 1970 (after his registration)
- Jennifer can apply for FBR based on the unbroken chain
Scenario 3: Broken Chain (Not Eligible)
- Bridget was born in Galway in 1920
- Bridget emigrated to Chicago and had Thomas in 1950
- Thomas never registered on FBR
- Thomas had David in 1980
- David cannot apply for FBR—the chain is broken
Northern Ireland & Special Cases
Northern Ireland presents unique considerations for FBR applicants, particularly given Brexit and the provisions of the Good Friday Agreement.
Northern Ireland Birth = Irish Citizenship Eligibility
The term "island of Ireland" in Irish nationality law explicitly includes Northern Ireland. According to Citizens Information: "If you were born in Northern Ireland before 1 January 2005, you are entitled to claim Irish citizenship."
For FBR purposes, if your grandparent was born in Belfast, Derry, Newry, or anywhere else in Northern Ireland, they were born "on the island of Ireland"—full stop. You're eligible for FBR just as if they'd been born in Dublin or Cork.
The Good Friday Agreement
The 1998 Good Friday Agreement (Belfast Agreement) enshrined the right of people born in Northern Ireland to identify as British, Irish, or both. As the UK Parliament Library notes: "The right to hold both Irish and British citizenship is formally recognized by both governments and remains unaffected by any future change in Northern Ireland's constitutional status."
This has significant implications:
- Your Northern Ireland-born grandparent may have considered themselves British, but they were also entitled to Irish citizenship
- Their children (your parent) are entitled to Irish citizenship by descent
- You are entitled to claim Irish citizenship through FBR
Post-Brexit Surge in Northern Ireland FBR Applications
Brexit drove a massive increase in FBR applications from people with Northern Irish connections. When the UK left the EU, British citizens lost automatic rights to live and work across Europe. But those with Irish heritage—including Northern Irish heritage—could reclaim those rights through Irish citizenship.
If your grandparent was born in Northern Ireland, Brexit actually expanded your options: you can claim Irish citizenship (and EU rights) while also potentially qualifying for British citizenship through the same ancestor.
Records from Northern Ireland
Finding birth certificates for Northern Ireland-born ancestors requires different sources than Republic of Ireland records:
- General Register Office for Northern Ireland (GRONI): Civil registration records from 1864
- Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI): Historical records, wills, church records
- District Council offices: Local registration offices
Note: Northern Ireland uses a different civil registration system than the Republic. You'll need to order certificates from GRONI, not the Republic's GRO in Roscommon.
Adopted Persons
If you were adopted and your biological grandparent was born in Ireland, you may still be eligible for FBR. Irish citizenship by descent is based on biological lineage, not legal parentage.
However, you'll need to provide:
- Your original birth certificate (showing biological parents)
- Adoption order/decree
- Evidence of biological grandparent's Irish birth
Adopted persons may face additional challenges in obtaining biological family records. Consider engaging a genealogist or adoption search service if you need help locating these documents.
Questions about eligibility?
Our AI assistant can analyze your specific situation and give you personalized guidance.
Check My EligibilityRequired Documents Checklist
Document preparation is where FBR applications succeed or fail. The Department of Foreign Affairs requires specific documents in specific formats—original certificates, proper certifications, and witnessed signatures. Here's the complete checklist.
Documents for Your Irish-Born Grandparent
These documents establish the foundation of your claim—proof that your grandparent was born on the island of Ireland.
- Original Civil Birth Certificate
- Must be the long-form version showing parents' details
- Must be a civil certificate (not a church baptismal record)
- For Republic of Ireland: Order from General Register Office (GRO)
- For Northern Ireland: Order from GRONI
- Original Civil Marriage Certificate (if applicable)
- If your grandparent's name changed through marriage
- Establishes the connection to their children
- Death Certificate (if applicable)
- May be requested for deceased grandparents
- Helps verify identity and family connections
Documents for Your Parent
These documents prove the connection between your Irish-born grandparent and you through your parent.
- Original Civil Birth Certificate
- Long-form showing parents' names (your grandparents)
- Must match the names on your grandparent's marriage certificate
- Original Civil Marriage Certificate (if applicable)
- If your parent's name changed through marriage
- Connects your parent to you through your birth certificate
- FBR Certificate (if applicable)
- Only for great-grandparent claims where parent was previously registered
- Proves the unbroken chain of citizenship
Documents for You (The Applicant)
- Original Civil Birth Certificate
- Long-form showing parents' names
- This is YOUR birth certificate, not the Irish ancestor's
- Marriage Certificate or Change of Name Document (if applicable)
- If your name has changed since birth
- Deed poll, divorce decree, or other legal name change documents
- Certified Photocopy of Current Photographic ID
- Passport, driver's license, or national identity card
- Must be certified as a "true copy of the original" by your witness
- Four Passport-Sized Photographs
- 35mm x 45mm, recent, white background
- Two must be signed and dated by your witness
Witness Requirements
Your application must be witnessed by someone who knows you personally. According to the Department of Foreign Affairs:
- The witness must be a professional (doctor, lawyer, police officer, notary, etc.)
- The witness must NOT be a relative
- The witness should use their official stamp on the form
- If no official stamp, include the witness's business card
The witness must:
- Sign two of your passport photographs
- Witness you signing Section D of your application form
- Certify the photocopy of your ID as a true copy
- Provide their professional contact details
Document Certification and Format
Original documents only: Photocopies are not accepted (except for your ID, which must be a certified photocopy).
Civil certificates only: Church baptismal records, commemorative certificates, or family Bible entries are not accepted. You need official civil registration certificates.
All documents are returned: According to the Department: "At the end of the process all your original certificates will be returned to the address on your application form."
Step-by-Step Application Process
The FBR application is entirely online, but requires physical documents to be mailed. Here's the complete process from start to certificate.
Phase 1: Research and Document Gathering (2-8 Weeks)
- Verify Your Eligibility
- Confirm your grandparent was born on the island of Ireland
- Map out your family tree to identify required documents
- Check for any name changes through marriage or other means
- Obtain Irish Ancestor's Birth Certificate
- Search free indexes at IrishGenealogy.ie
- Order from GRO (Republic) or GRONI (Northern Ireland)
- Cost: €20 for certified copy from Irish GRO
- Timeline: 5-10 business days
- Gather Supporting Certificates
- Your birth certificate (long-form)
- Parent's birth certificate (long-form)
- Marriage certificates for any name changes
- Order from relevant civil registration offices in your country
- Prepare Photographs and ID
- Get passport-quality photos
- Ensure your ID is current and valid
Phase 2: Online Application (1-2 Days)
- Create Account at fbr.dfa.ie
- Visit the official portal: fbr.dfa.ie
- Register with email address
- Verify your email
- Complete Online Application Form
- Enter your personal details
- Enter details of your Irish ancestor
- Enter details of your parent (the connecting link)
- Upload document scans where requested
- Pay Application Fee
- €278 for adults (18+)
- €153 for children (under 18)
- Fee includes return postage for your certificates
- Payment by credit/debit card
- Print Application Summary
- The system generates a PDF to print
- This is the form that must be witnessed and signed
Phase 3: Witnessing and Mailing (1-2 Weeks)
- Have Application Witnessed
- Meet with your professional witness
- Sign Section D in front of them
- Have them sign and date two photographs
- Have them certify your ID photocopy
- Ensure they stamp the form (or include their business card)
- Compile Your Document Package
- Printed, witnessed application form
- All original certificates (grandparent's, parent's, yours)
- Four photographs (two witnessed)
- Certified ID photocopy
- Mail to Dublin
- Send via registered/tracked mail for security
- Address: Passport Service, PO Box 12980, Dublin 2, Ireland
- Keep proof of posting
Phase 4: Processing (Approximately 9 Months)
- Application Received
- You'll receive confirmation of receipt
- Your application enters the processing queue
- Document Review
- Officials verify all documents
- They may request additional documents if needed
- Applications requiring additional documents take longer
- Decision
- If approved, you're entered on the Foreign Births Register
- You receive your Foreign Birth Registration Certificate
- All original documents returned
Phase 5: After Approval
- Receive Your FBR Certificate
- Mailed to your address on the application
- This is your proof of Irish citizenship
- Keep it safe—you'll need it for passport applications
- Apply for Irish Passport
- Now you can apply at Passport Online
- Include your FBR Certificate as proof of citizenship
- First passport typically takes 8-10 weeks
Timeline & Costs
Realistic Timeline
| Phase | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Document Gathering | 2-8 weeks | Depends on ancestor research needs |
| Online Application | 1-2 days | Form completion and payment |
| Witnessing | 1 week | Schedule with professional witness |
| Mailing | 1-2 weeks | International post to Dublin |
| FBR Processing | ~9 months | From receipt of complete documents |
| Passport Application | 8-10 weeks | After FBR approval |
Total: 11-15 months from start to Irish passport in hand
According to Berkeley Solicitors: "The time taken to process Foreign Birth Registration has decreased from over two and a half years in 2023 to approximately nine months currently. This improvement is a result of the investment of significant extra resources to the FBR Unit over the past two years."
Complete Cost Breakdown
| Expense | Cost (EUR) | Cost (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Government Fees | ||
| FBR Application (adult) | €278 | ~$300 |
| FBR Application (child) | €153 | ~$165 |
| Irish Passport (after FBR) | €80-100 | ~$87-109 |
| Document Costs | ||
| Irish birth certificate (GRO) | €20 | ~$22 |
| Your birth certificate | Varies | $15-50 |
| Parent's birth certificate | Varies | $15-50 |
| Marriage certificates (if needed) | Varies | $15-50 each |
| Passport photos | €10-20 | ~$11-22 |
| Mailing/Admin | ||
| Registered international post | €30-60 | ~$33-65 |
| Optional Services | ||
| Genealogist assistance | €200-1,000+ | ~$220-1,090+ |
| Immigration solicitor | €500-2,000+ | ~$545-2,180+ |
Budget Summary:
- DIY Minimum: €350-450 (~$380-490)
- Including Passport: €450-550 (~$490-600)
- With Professional Help: €1,000-3,000+ (~$1,090-3,270+)
Common Mistakes That Delay FBR Applications
FBR applications are frequently delayed or returned due to avoidable errors. Learn from others' mistakes to ensure your application moves through smoothly.
1. Submitting Short-Form Birth Certificates
The most common error. According to McGrath Mullan Solicitors: "Incomplete applications and not submitting the correct documentation that prove your direct line of descent to your ancestor will mean your application is denied."
The fix: Every birth certificate must be the long-form version showing parents' names, dates, and places of birth. Wallet-sized cards or certificates without parental details won't be accepted.
2. Missing or Improper Witness Signatures
Photographs not signed, forms not witnessed, or witnesses who don't meet the professional requirement.
The fix: Use a professional witness (doctor, lawyer, notary, police officer). Have them sign two photos and witness your form signature. Include their stamp or business card.
3. Name Discrepancies Across Documents
Your grandmother's birth certificate says "Mary O'Brien," her marriage certificate says "Mary O'Brian," and your parent's birth certificate says "Mary Bryan." These inconsistencies raise red flags.
The fix: Include explanatory documents for any name changes. Marriage certificates, divorce decrees, deed polls, or a statutory declaration explaining common name variations (especially Irish names with variable spellings).
4. Not Understanding the Generational Chain
Applying based on a great-grandparent without an unbroken registration chain. Or misunderstanding that your parent being "eligible" for Irish citizenship doesn't make them (or you) Irish—they need to have actually registered.
The fix: Map your family tree carefully. For great-grandparent claims, verify that your parent was registered BEFORE you were born.
5. Sending Church Records Instead of Civil Certificates
Baptismal certificates from the local parish are not the same as civil birth certificates. Ireland requires official civil registration documents.
The fix: Order certificates from the General Register Office (GRO), not from churches. Civil registration in Ireland began in 1864 for all births (1845 for non-Catholic marriages).
6. Not Including All Required Documents
Submitting incomplete packages delays processing significantly. According to parliamentary records: "Applications which require further supporting documents will take longer to process."
The fix: Use a checklist. Double-check before mailing. Consider having someone review your package.
7. Applying at Wrong Time (Expectant Parents)
Waiting until after your child is born to apply means your child won't be eligible for FBR.
The fix: If you're pregnant or planning children, apply NOW. If already pregnant, request urgent processing.
8. Photocopies Instead of Originals
Sending photocopies of certificates instead of originals.
The fix: Only originals are accepted (except for your ID, which should be a certified photocopy). Your originals will be returned after processing.
Finding Irish Records: A Genealogy Primer
Before you can apply for FBR, you need to prove your Irish ancestor existed and was born in Ireland. Here's how to find the records you need.
The General Register Office (GRO)
The General Register Office (Oifig An Ard-Chláraitheora) is Ireland's central repository for civil records.
- Births: Registered from 1864
- Deaths: Registered from 1864
- Marriages: All marriages from 1864, non-Catholic marriages from 1845
- Location: Government Offices, Convent Road, Roscommon
Ordering certificates: €20 for a certified copy, €5 for an uncertified copy. Order online at Order a Certificate.
Free Online Search Tools
Before ordering certificates, search free indexes to find your ancestor:
- IrishGenealogy.ie: Official government site with free civil record indexes
- FamilySearch.org: Free transcribed indexes (same data as Irish government)
- Ancestry.com: Subscription service with additional records and tools
- FindMyPast.ie: Another subscription service with Irish focus
When You Can't Find Records
If your ancestor was born before 1864 (pre-civil registration) or records are missing/damaged, you'll face additional challenges:
- Church records: Baptismal records predate civil registration but aren't accepted for FBR (though they can help identify when to search civil records)
- Census records: Irish census returns (1901, 1911) can help locate families
- Passenger lists: If your ancestor emigrated, ship manifests often list birthplace
- Professional genealogists: Consider hiring help for difficult cases
Northern Ireland Records
For ancestors born in Northern Ireland, use different resources:
Professional Help
Several organizations specialize in Irish genealogy and FBR assistance:
- Irish Citizenship Consultants: End-to-end application assistance
- Finders International: Genealogical research services
- McGrath Mullan Solicitors: Immigration lawyers with FBR expertise
- Irish Family History Centre: Genealogy research
After FBR: Getting Your Irish Passport
Once your FBR is approved and you receive your Foreign Birth Registration Certificate, you're an Irish citizen. The next step: getting your Irish passport.
You're Now Irish
According to the Department of Foreign Affairs: "Once a person is entered onto the Foreign Births Register they are an Irish citizen and entitled to apply for an Irish passport."
Your FBR Certificate is your proof of citizenship. Treat it like a vital document—store it safely and make copies.
First Irish Passport Application
Apply through Passport Online—the quickest method for first-time applicants.
Required documents:
- Foreign Birth Registration Certificate
- Current photographic ID (e.g., your existing passport)
- Passport photos (digital upload)
- Payment (€80-100 depending on passport type)
Processing time: 8-10 weeks for first-time applicants born abroad.
Passport Validity and Renewals
- Adult passport: Valid for 10 years
- Child passport: Valid for 5 years
- Renewals: Straightforward online process once you have your first passport
Benefits of Irish Citizenship
Why go through the FBR process? Because Irish citizenship opens doors that few other citizenships can match.
EU Citizenship
According to the European Commission: "Irish nationals automatically enjoy EU citizenship and benefit from important rights under EU law."
As an Irish citizen, you can:
- Live in any of 27 EU member states—no visa required
- Work anywhere in the EU without permits
- Study at EU universities with domestic tuition rates
- Access healthcare across the EU with European Health Insurance Card
- Vote in European Parliament elections
- Own property without restrictions
Passport Power
The Irish passport consistently ranks among the world's strongest. According to Immigrant Invest: "Ireland ranked number one in 2025 thanks to its extensive visa-free travel. Irish citizens enjoy access to 176 destinations—either visa-free, through a visa on arrival, or via an electronic visa."
Key travel benefits:
- Visa-free access to most of the world
- Faster immigration lines at many airports
- Easier access to UK (Common Travel Area continues post-Brexit)
- Stronger consular protection when traveling
Dual Citizenship Allowed
According to Irish Immigration: "Ireland allows dual citizenship, which means that you can obtain Irish citizenship without losing the citizenship of your home country."
This is crucial for Americans, Brits, Canadians, and others. You don't have to choose—you keep your existing citizenship AND gain Irish citizenship.
- USA: Allows dual citizenship
- UK: Allows dual citizenship
- Canada: Allows dual citizenship
- Australia: Allows dual citizenship (since 2002)
Post-Brexit Benefits
For those with British connections, Irish citizenship restores EU rights lost through Brexit:
- Freedom to live and work in EU countries
- Use EU/EEA passport lanes at airports
- Avoid future UK visa requirements for EU travel
- Access to EU consular assistance worldwide
Passing Citizenship to Future Generations
Once you're registered, your children (born after your registration) will be eligible for Irish citizenship. This is the gift that keeps giving—securing EU citizenship for your descendants.
Frequently Asked Questions
Eligibility Questions
My grandparent was born in Northern Ireland. Does that count?
Yes. The "island of Ireland" includes both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. A grandparent born in Belfast, Derry, or anywhere in NI qualifies you for FBR.
Can I apply if my great-grandparent was born in Ireland?
Only if your parent was registered on the Foreign Births Register before you were born. If not, the standard FBR route isn't available. You might qualify for citizenship by association (Section 16), but that requires living in Ireland.
Both my grandparents were Irish. Does that help?
You only need one Irish-born grandparent. Having two doesn't change the process or speed it up—but it does mean you have backup documentation if one line's records are problematic.
My grandmother was Irish but I only have her married name. Can I still apply?
Yes, but you'll need her marriage certificate to document the name change. Search Irish records under both her maiden name and married name.
I was adopted. Am I eligible?
If your biological grandparent was born in Ireland, yes. You'll need documentation of your biological lineage (original birth certificate) plus adoption records.
Process Questions
How long does FBR take?
Currently about 9 months from when the Passport Service receives your complete documentation. This has improved significantly from 2+ years in 2023.
Can I apply online?
The application starts online at fbr.dfa.ie, but you must mail original documents to Dublin. It's a hybrid process.
Will I get my original documents back?
Yes. All original certificates are returned to you after processing. They're mailed with your FBR Certificate.
Can I apply for my children at the same time as myself?
You can submit applications simultaneously, but your children's eligibility depends on YOUR registration being complete before their birth. If your children were born before you registered, they're not eligible through FBR.
What if I can't find my grandparent's birth certificate?
Search the GRO indexes first (free at IrishGenealogy.ie). If records are missing, consider hiring a professional genealogist. In some cases, alternative evidence may be accepted—contact the Department for guidance.
After FBR Questions
Once approved, am I automatically Irish?
Yes. Entry on the Foreign Births Register makes you an Irish citizen with full rights. No further steps required for citizenship itself.
How quickly can I get my passport after FBR approval?
First-time passport applications for those born abroad typically take 8-10 weeks. Apply through Passport Online for fastest processing.
Do I have to live in Ireland?
No. FBR doesn't require residency—before, during, or after. You can remain in your home country and simply enjoy the benefits of Irish citizenship when you choose to use them.
Will I have to pay Irish taxes?
Irish citizenship alone doesn't create tax obligations. Tax residency is based on physical presence (183+ days in Ireland). If you live outside Ireland, you generally won't owe Irish taxes.
Resources & Next Steps
Official Government Resources
- Foreign Births Registration Portal — Official application site
- Department of Foreign Affairs - FBR Guide — Official guidance
- Citizens Information - Foreign Births Register — Comprehensive overview
- General Register Office — Order Irish certificates
- Passport Online — Apply for Irish passport after FBR
Genealogy Resources
- IrishGenealogy.ie — Free civil record indexes
- FamilySearch — Free genealogy database
- National Archives of Ireland — Historical records
- PRONI — Northern Ireland records
Professional Services
- Irish Dual Citizenship — Application assistance
- McGrath Mullan Solicitors — Immigration lawyers
- Irish Citizenship Consultants — End-to-end help
- Finders International — Genealogy research
Community Resources
- Charitable Irish Society — Boston-based community organization
- Irish Diaspora Center of Philadelphia — Community assistance
Get Personalized Guidance
Every FBR application is unique. Your family history, available documents, and specific circumstances all affect your path. Our AI assistant can help you:
- Determine if you're eligible for FBR
- Map your generational chain
- Create a customized document checklist
- Navigate the application process step by step
- Understand what to do if documents are missing
January 2026 Updates
- Processing time: ~9 months (down from 2.5+ years in 2023)
- Application fee: €278 adults, €153 children (unchanged)
- Online portal: fbr.dfa.ie remains the only application method
- Applications in system: ~45,000 (36,000 processing, 9,000 awaiting docs)
- Irish passport ranking: #1 globally for 2025