How do I get a german passport, I was born in germany?
Answer:
Contact the local German Consulate
German Consulate General
100 North Biscayne Boulevard, Suite 2200
Miami, FL 33132-2381
Tel. (305) 358-0290+ (with telephone information system)
Tel. (305) 358-0290+ ext. 464 (passport and visa questions)
http://www.germany.info/relaunch/info/mi...
http://www.germany.info/relaunch/info/co...
http://www.epass.de/
oh oh ooooh i was born there to! i would just search the internet i got a passport as a kid so i dont know sorry ( im kinda sorda still a kid)
I would contact the german embassy.....
Go to the German embassy nearest to you. They will probably need some proof, like a birth certificate, that you were actually born there.
How long have you lived in the U.S.? Were you ever a CITIZEN of Germany? I'm asking because if you were born on a U.S. military base in Germany, or if you're an American citizen now...you fill out paperwork at the post office. If any of the above is true, you need an American passport TO Europe...not a German passport. They have kits for passports at the post office. In it, you'll find a questionnairre and paperwork for a passport photo. Fill it out, get your personal papers together (drivers license, birth certificate, and whatever else they ask for)...then got to your local Kinko's (or most other copy/printer store, or possibly Bureau of Motor Vehicles) and have a passport picture taken. Then mail the whole thing back to the address on your passport kit, and they'll send you a new passport.
Contact the City you were born in. The health dept can advise you of all you need to do.
my cousin was a German citizen until she was 23(she was born there), then she comes over here, applies for her US citizenship, gets it, then Germany revokes her German citizenship, and still cant get it re-enstate because shes a US citizen.
so, have fun with that and best of luck.
Germany Does not permit Dual citizenship. I moved from Germany as a child. Every time I apply for a passport, I need to prove that I have not applied for another citizenship. If you're moving back to germany, your best bet would be to attempt to regain German Citizenship when there. You may even be able to swing dual citizenship from there, as they may not search foreign citizenships if you reside there.
I've been told that there is a clause in the German Constitution that states, "once a German, always a German" on this premise, you may be able to re-gain German Citizenship.
Remember that as a German Citizen, you would be considered a Citizen or the European Union, and from what I've been told, you'd be legally entitled to work in any EU state.
Good luck
The immigration information post by website user , MyTend.com not guarantee correctness
