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The whole process (FBR + passport) only took me 10 weeks. (That was via the London embassy; may be different in the USA or Netherlands.) The best thing is that your immigration record isn't taken into consideration. In fact, nothing is relevant as long as you have the right genes!taraann21 wrote:Yes...both my grandparents are Irish. That whole process can take up to three years and I was just looking to go on holiday and do some digging on my ancestry for a few weeks. Guess I have myself to blame for not being perapred...have done extensive traveling my whole life (dad was a pilot) and never encounterd this. Pretty pissed my immagration record is tarnished now....Does anyone know if this will effect my travel around the rest of the EU? Will I need a visa everywhere I go now ?
Marriage certificates are requested for the FBR application. I assume they are needed at least for female ancestors who changed their name on marriage, because otherwise there would be no way to match them with their respective birth certificates.Brigid from Ireland wrote:Apply for foreign birth registration. Wait about ten weeks until you get it. Then apply for Irish passport. Any child born to you before you register is not Irish, any child born to you after you register is Irish and can get Irish passport, by following the same route of foreign birth registration. If you have siblings or cousins encourage them to register, as EU citizenship is lost to their children unless they register before the children are born, and it is a very valuable asset.
You should not need marriage certs - the child of unmarried parents has the same rights, so don't bother paying for marriage certs.