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i dont know what is the impact will be on your current nationality for your kid if your kid takes up irish nationality. if you dont mind i ask, what nationality are you?strongbow wrote:My wife and I are both non-EU nationals who have been working here--I have been here for 7.5 years while my wife has been here for the past 4 years. We are expecting our first child next month and given the fact that both of us have been here for more than 3 years on a legally valid work status our child will be eligible for an Irish passport. However rather than applying for an Irish passport for the child straightaway we are thinking of applying for our current nationality passport initially and maybe in about 2 or 3 years time we will apply for an irish passport for the child.
My queries are:
1. Will there be any issues in claiming Irish citizenship/passport for the child at that stage?
2. is there any time limit within which a child born to non-EU parents in Ireland but eligible for Irish citizenship should apply for a passport?
3. Is there any other document(i.e. other than a passport) which is issued to prove that the child is an Irish citizen?
The issue does not have to do with being able to have two (or more) passports at the same time; it comes down to citizenship. A passport is merely a travel document that acts as proof of indentity and citizenship. If you hold a passport, about 99% of the time it means you are a citizen of the issuing country. (The other 1% is when people fasely use a passport despite having either knowingly renounced or (un)knowingly lost their citizenship, most often due to acquisition of another nationality.)strongbow wrote:The main reason for this is because we cannot hold both the passports simultaneously.I can't really understand why you would want to delay getting the irish passport and get your own country's one first (why not both immediately?), but that's your business.