Italian Citizenship Ruling:
The door has officially closed for millions of people around the world who dreamed of claiming Italian citizenship through their distant ancestors.
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In a landmark decision, Italy‘s Constitutional Court has upheld a controversial 2025 law, ending a 160-year-old practice of granting citizenship by “right of blood” without generational limits.
This changes everything for the global Italian diaspora.
- The Final Word: Italy’s highest court has rejected constitutional challenges to a 2025 law that dramatically narrows the path to citizenship by descent.
- The New Reality: Citizenship claims are now restricted to applicants with an Italian-born parent or grandparent, ending claims through great-grandparents or more distant relatives.
- Who Is Affected: Millions of descendants, especially in the Americas, who had a theoretical path to an EU passport have now lost that right overnight.
What Just Happened?
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The Court’s Final Say
On March 12, 2026, the Italian Constitutional Court issued a brief but powerful statement: the challenges against the 2025 citizenship law were “partly unfounded and partly inadmissible.” While the full, detailed verdict is expected in the coming weeks, the message is clear.
The law stands.
For the tens of thousands who had been preparing applications based on a great-grandparent who left Italy a century ago, the path has been severed.
Our team observed the legal community’s reaction, which was a mix of disappointment and grim acceptance.
“This was an extremely clear, harsh intervention,” Professor Corrado Caruso, one of the lawyers arguing against the law, told CNN.
The verdict from the Constitutional Court cannot be appealed, making this the definitive end of the line for this specific challenge within Italy.
The Backstory: How Italy Rewrote Its Citizenship Rules
This didn’t happen in a vacuum.
For more discussion, see this discussion on Reddit.
The trending ruling is the final act in a drama that began a year ago.
In March 2025, the Italian government, led by Deputy Prime Minister Antonio Tajani, issued an emergency decree that became known as the “Tajani Decree.” It was a radical departure from the past.
For decades, Italy operated on a generous jure sanguinis (right of blood) principle.
If you could prove an unbroken line of citizenship back to an Italian ancestor, no matter how far back, you were considered Italian from birth.
The process was about *recognizing* a status you already held.
The new law, however, changed the game entirely.
The government argued the reform was necessary to stop “passport shopping” and to relieve the immense administrative burden on Italian consulates, which faced backlogs of hundreds of thousands of applications.
Who Is Most Affected?
The impact of this ruling is felt most acutely in the Americas.
Nations like Brazil, Argentina, and the United States are home to vast communities of Italian descendants.
To put it in perspective, in 2023 alone, Brazilians accounted for over 68% of all citizenships granted through ancestry.
Now, most of those future applicants will no longer qualify.
The translation for your day-to-day is this: if your closest link to Italy was a great-grandfather who boarded a ship in Naples in 1910, your dream of an Italian passport has likely ended.
The connection is now deemed too distant.
The “So What” For Your Family Tree
To understand the magnitude of this shift, our team broke down the practical differences.
The change is stark.
| Feature | Old Rule (Pre-March 28, 2025) | New Rule (As of March 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Generational Limit | None.
You could claim through a great-grandparent or even earlier ancestor. |
Strictly limited to an Italian-born parent or grandparent. |
| Principle | Citizenship was a right from birth (jure sanguinis) that simply needed official recognition. | Citizenship is a status that must be applied for under narrow conditions, requiring a more recent link. |
| Application Cutoff | Not applicable. | Applications filed or appointments booked before March 27, 2025, are grandfathered in under the old rules. |
While Conventional Wisdom Says This Was About Passports, Our Data Points to a Different Reality
The official narrative is that this reform was a necessary evil to curb abuse of the system.
But let’s step back for a second.
Our analysis suggests this is less about administrative efficiency and more about a fundamental redefinition of the Italian identity.
Italy is signaling a pivot from a nation defined by its historic bloodlines to one that prioritizes tangible, present-day connections.
The state’s lawyers successfully argued that descendants who had not yet formally claimed their citizenship held merely an “expectation” of it, a “fictitious link” that could be severed.
In practical terms, this means the state believes that without a recent, direct connection—like a parent or grandparent born on Italian soil—the bond is no longer strong enough to warrant a passport.
The Human Cost of a Legal Change
This legal shift has a messy, human reality.
We’ve seen reports of the frustrating new reality this creates.
As one lawyer noted, the change has created disparity even within the same family.
One sibling who applied in February 2025 might be a recognized Italian citizen, while their brother or sister who waited until April 2025 is now completely ineligible.
It’s a painful outcome that no legal brief can fully capture.
This sentiment is echoed across online forums where applicants have spent years and thousands of dollars gathering documents, only to have their eligibility erased by the 2025 decree and now confirmed by the court.
The feeling is one of a promise being broken.
What’s Next?
The Legal Battles Aren’t Over
While the constitutional challenge to the generational limit is over, this isn’t the end of the story for Italian citizenship law.
Other complex legal questions remain.
- The “1948 Cases”: The path for descendants of Italian women who gave birth before January 1, 1948, remains open.
Because women couldn’t pass on citizenship before this date, these cases have always been handled through the courts and are not affected by the new law.
New interpretations have held that this breaks the citizenship line, and this issue is still being decided in Italy’s higher courts.
For now, however, the main avenue for the global diaspora has been decisively narrowed.
The era of reaching back across the centuries to claim Italian heritage is over.
The court has spoken, and for millions, the Italian dream will have to remain just that—a dream.
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