Right, this was how I originally understood it, but I couldn't find the section you pointed to and I was suddenly questioning whether the great-grandparents bit was just for simplification after all!TF101 wrote:The citizenship continues as far as the unbroken chain. See this page, and particularly the following quote:
"If you are entitled to register, your Irish citizenship is effective from the date of registration. The Irish citizenship of successive generations may be maintained in this way by each generation ensuring their registration in the Foreign Births Register before the birth of the next generation."
I agree that the reference to great-grandparents is confusing. The simple way to put it (post-1986) is that you can become an Irish citizen if your parent was an Irish citizen when you were born.
If that parent was born in Ireland, you are automatically a citizen. If your parent was not born in Ireland, you need to register in the FBR, and will not be a citizen until you do so.
Edit: And if you aren't sure if your parent was an Irish citizen when you were born, go back and do the same analysis for them first!
Thanks for the confirmation.
