sine-shine
Registered User
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Hey Sine Shine
Congratulations on the new addition to the family. If you contact the department of foreign affairs they hold a Register that foreign life events can be registered. They also issue certificates. In relation to the PPS number if you contact Client Identity services they should be able to assist you in relation to children’s allowance.
All the Best
Jellyjelly
Check with the passport office whether you need a certified translation or not (and, depending on where he/she was born, what they accept as a birth cert - my son was born in Spain and DFA accept only the 'partido literal' as a birth cert, as it shows the name of the father and mother of the child - there are other versions of a Spanish birth cert that they do not accept)
If neither of you were born in Ireland but are citizens by virtue of having a parent born in Ireland, your child is not automatically a citizen but can apply to become a citizen by virtue of having an Irish born grandparent. They do this via a process called Foreign Birth Registration through the Department of Foreign Affairs. Once registered, they are formally an Irish citizen and you then apply for a passport for them in the normal way.
It is complex. Read here and follow the advice.http://www.citizensinformation.ie/e...ish_citizenship_through_birth_or_descent.htmlHi to everyone.
I have a child that is born outside of Ireland within EU. We (the parents) are Irish Citizens through naturalisation. What steps should we follow to get Irish passport + PPS (maybe Birth Certificate translated in english?) for the baby, and to include him to child benefit?
Thanks in advance to everyone.
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