Plenty of schools in Europe have completely free tuition, including entirely online degrees, as well as have much lower student loan rates (mine from Sweden 0.5% to 1.25%) than American student loans. But a lot of these are only free for people who have European citizenship or residency and who are not on a student visa.
There are two countries that I know of where you can get citizenship by ancestry even if it is great-great grandparents or similar. Italy and Hungary. There may be more.
The key is proving your lineage (and yes, you should be able to do it if you were adopted, I assume as long as the relevant parent is on your amended birth certificate, which you can do nowadays in the US at least).
- Get certified copies of birth, death, marriage, name change, divorce, and naturalization records for as many of your ancestors along the direct lineage as you can. These can cost up to $65 per document depending on which state you live in. Estimate to pay $200 for each generation you need (if your parents emigrated from Italy then $200, if your great-grandparents then $600...).
- Get apostilles for each of these required documents. If they originated in the US, it needs a state apostille, if in Italy or Hungary, one of their apostilles. As an example, New York state only charges $10 per document for an apostille.
- These documents may then need to get a certified translation to Italian or Hungarian. For Italy, if you're applying at an Italian consulate in the US which is not Boston or New York - and you need to be applying to the consulate nearest to where you live, not to the one where your ancestors lived - they might not require a certified translation, in that case you could even just translate them yourself. Then you would go to a physical appointment at the consulate with an interview. If you are using a service, this can cost $60 per page or it can be included as part of their citizenship help package.
- You will need to pay the actual citizenship application fee, usually in person at the consulate, which is at least until recently was 300 Euros for Italy. At some consulates, this 300 Euro fee includes translation costs so your translations are "free".
- Some states don't have real Italian consulates, so those people need to travel to another state to apply for citizenship. A video I watched said that at the time the video was made, Washington and Oregon residents would have to travel to San Francisco.
It is easiest to do this via great-grandparents and younger generations. If it was your great-great grandparents it's not impossible, but it might be worth it to ask if getting your parent or grandparent citizenship first somehow helps out your case in any way.
There are services that can help you with all of this. All in all it may cost $3,000 or more to get the citizenship. But that is a cheap price to pay for free college education, hassle-free boarder crossing and visa-free residency in pretty much anywhere in Europe, plus a backup residence if a war breaks out (although Europe might not be the best choice for that!). And it is not a scam, I have family friends in the US who did it via their great-grandparents.
After that you would want to apply for an Italian or Hungarian passport.
Also, not that I explicitly advocate this, but it might be a way to start over with a "new life" if you have a criminal past, as your criminal record is not going to transfer over to the new country. This would enable you to use your degrees for some jobs that you currently can't hold (as an example, I know someone barred from being a teacher or handling cash in the US, because they got arrested for drug use crimes, although they are no longer using drugs). Not sure if the citizenship application checks for your criminal background or not.
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I will be trying this with my own family with Italian ancestry and will get back to you, very eventually, on how much it cost and how it went. It will take me quite a while to gather up all the relative names, documents and then get up the money and apply. I'm hoping I can somehow reuse the same documents for multiple applications and then get citizenship for a bunch of my relatives as a big Christmas present.
There are two countries that I know of where you can get citizenship by ancestry even if it is great-great grandparents or similar. Italy and Hungary. There may be more.
The key is proving your lineage (and yes, you should be able to do it if you were adopted, I assume as long as the relevant parent is on your amended birth certificate, which you can do nowadays in the US at least).
- Get certified copies of birth, death, marriage, name change, divorce, and naturalization records for as many of your ancestors along the direct lineage as you can. These can cost up to $65 per document depending on which state you live in. Estimate to pay $200 for each generation you need (if your parents emigrated from Italy then $200, if your great-grandparents then $600...).
- Get apostilles for each of these required documents. If they originated in the US, it needs a state apostille, if in Italy or Hungary, one of their apostilles. As an example, New York state only charges $10 per document for an apostille.
- These documents may then need to get a certified translation to Italian or Hungarian. For Italy, if you're applying at an Italian consulate in the US which is not Boston or New York - and you need to be applying to the consulate nearest to where you live, not to the one where your ancestors lived - they might not require a certified translation, in that case you could even just translate them yourself. Then you would go to a physical appointment at the consulate with an interview. If you are using a service, this can cost $60 per page or it can be included as part of their citizenship help package.
- You will need to pay the actual citizenship application fee, usually in person at the consulate, which is at least until recently was 300 Euros for Italy. At some consulates, this 300 Euro fee includes translation costs so your translations are "free".
- Some states don't have real Italian consulates, so those people need to travel to another state to apply for citizenship. A video I watched said that at the time the video was made, Washington and Oregon residents would have to travel to San Francisco.
It is easiest to do this via great-grandparents and younger generations. If it was your great-great grandparents it's not impossible, but it might be worth it to ask if getting your parent or grandparent citizenship first somehow helps out your case in any way.
There are services that can help you with all of this. All in all it may cost $3,000 or more to get the citizenship. But that is a cheap price to pay for free college education, hassle-free boarder crossing and visa-free residency in pretty much anywhere in Europe, plus a backup residence if a war breaks out (although Europe might not be the best choice for that!). And it is not a scam, I have family friends in the US who did it via their great-grandparents.
After that you would want to apply for an Italian or Hungarian passport.
Also, not that I explicitly advocate this, but it might be a way to start over with a "new life" if you have a criminal past, as your criminal record is not going to transfer over to the new country. This would enable you to use your degrees for some jobs that you currently can't hold (as an example, I know someone barred from being a teacher or handling cash in the US, because they got arrested for drug use crimes, although they are no longer using drugs). Not sure if the citizenship application checks for your criminal background or not.
------------
I will be trying this with my own family with Italian ancestry and will get back to you, very eventually, on how much it cost and how it went. It will take me quite a while to gather up all the relative names, documents and then get up the money and apply. I'm hoping I can somehow reuse the same documents for multiple applications and then get citizenship for a bunch of my relatives as a big Christmas present.
Complete: 1) Trade school - Hospitality, Bartending. 2) Swedish BA - Japanese. 3) ENEB MA - Hotel, Project Management, MBA. 4) JLPT N1, 120-hour TEFL, TISUS, substitute teacher license
In Progress: 1) WGU MA - Education for teacher licensure. 2) Mastercurssos MA - Child Development.
My ENEB ambassador/affiliate links: MBA + Masters or 2 Masters, & 1 Master's or 1 MBA.
In Progress: 1) WGU MA - Education for teacher licensure. 2) Mastercurssos MA - Child Development.
My ENEB ambassador/affiliate links: MBA + Masters or 2 Masters, & 1 Master's or 1 MBA.