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Oct 30, 2025

Germany scraps fast-track citizenship scheme after one year

Germany scraps fast-track citizenship scheme after one year
Germany’s experiment with accelerated naturalisation is over. In a cabinet meeting earlier this month, Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s government voted to repeal the 2024 “fast-track” citizenship clause that had allowed highly-skilled foreign residents to apply for a German passport after just three years instead of the standard five. The repeal was published in the Federal Gazette yesterday and enters into force immediately, meaning no new fast-track applications will be accepted and all pending cases will be assessed under the ordinary five-year residence rule.

The fast-track option had been introduced by the previous coalition to bolster Germany’s talent pipeline at a time when the ICT, engineering and health sectors were crying out for labour. Yet uptake was modest—fewer than 1,000 applications were filed—and the policy quickly became a lightning-rod in an increasingly heated immigration debate. Conservative lawmakers argued that the shorter qualifying period diluted the value of citizenship and failed to improve integration outcomes.

Business associations are disappointed. The Federation of German Industries (BDI) warned that rescinding an incentive so soon after rollout sends “an inconsistent signal” to global talent and could undermine Germany’s competitiveness vis-à-vis Canada and the Netherlands, which offer similarly accelerated naturalisation tracks. Immigration lawyers also note that many applicants timed their relocation packages around the three-year promise; employers will now need to adjust long-term assignment planning and localisation budgets.

The Interior Ministry says it will redirect resources from the discontinued programme to clearing naturalisation backlogs and expanding integration courses. HR teams, however, should prepare for longer retention periods before employees become EU citizens—and therefore fully mobile within the bloc. Companies are advised to revisit assignment contracts, social-security equalisation clauses and contingency plans for staff whose citizenship timelines just moved two years further out.

Practically, foreign nationals already holding a fast-track approval letter remain eligible, but anyone still in the queue reverts to the five-year rule unless they can show “exceptional integration achievements”—a term yet to be defined in secondary legislation. Employers should communicate the change promptly to affected assignees and, where necessary, explore alternative long-term residence permits such as the EU long-term card.
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