The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services has updated the Policy Manual guidance relating to children’s acquisition of citizenship and clarifying other provisions related to acquisition of citizenship. The update is effective as of July 18, 2024, and applies to applications that are pending or filed on or after July 18, 2024.
Policy Highlights
- Applicants who already filed an application for a Certificate of Citizenship and were denied, but became eligible following a change in USCIS policy, may file a motion to reopen the prior USCIS denial of their application.
- A U.S. citizen parent may meet the requirement of physical presence in the United States (or outlying possession) before the child’s birth regardless of immigration status.
- In cases where a child is born out of wedlock to two U.S. citizen parents and cannot acquire U.S. citizenship from the father, the mother meets the requirement by demonstrating 1 year of continuous physical presence in the United States or one of its outlying possessions before the child’s birth.
- For purposes of acquiring citizenship at birth, USCIS requires that a parent must be recognized as a legal parent of the child by the relevant jurisdiction at the time of the child’s birth.
- A child acquires citizenship under statutes requiring all conditions to be met while the child is under 18 years of age if the last condition was satisfied on the day of the child’s 18th birthday. Similarly, a child is eligible to obtain citizenship under INA 322 if USCIS approves the application and the child takes the oath (if required) on the day of the child’s 18th birthday.
- USCIS accepts a valid and unexpired U.S. passport or a Consular Report of Birth Abroad (CRBA) as evidence of U.S. citizenship. However, USCIS also determines whether the applicant properly acquired U.S. citizenship and if necessary, may request that DOS revoke the U.S. passport or cancel the CRBA before USCIS adjudicates an application for a Certificate of Citizenship.
- When adjudicating applications for a Certificate of Citizenship, if an applicant’s parent or parents’ U.S. citizenship is unknown or unclear, the officer must determine the applicant’s parents’ (and, if necessary, grandparents’) U.S. citizenship status before adjudicating the applicant’s citizenship claim (“nested claims of U.S. citizenship”).
- For purposes of an application for naturalization filed under the provision for children of a U.S. citizen who subjected them to battery or extreme cruelty, a stepchild’s relationship with the U.S. citizen stepparent does not need to continue to exist at the time of the application for naturalization.
- Adds new guidance on how to calculate physical presence in U.S. territorial waters and provides several updates to Nationality Charts 1, 2, 3, and 4.