---
title: Irish Citizenship by Naturalisation (Form 8)
country: ireland
service: "naturalisation-form-8"
category: immigration
difficulty: complex
estimated_time: "Document gathering and identity/residence scoring typically run several months before submission; most applications are then processed within twelve months, with the certificate issued four to six weeks after the citizenship ceremony"
cost_range: "€175 application fee per application (not refunded if refused), plus a certification fee on approval of up to €950 standard, €200 for a widow, widower or surviving civil partner of an Irish citizen, or €0 for a recognised refugee or stateless person"
last_verified: 2026-05-28
canonical: https://publicservices.guide/ireland/naturalisation-form-8/
status: current
confidence: low
tags:
  - immigration
  - naturalisation
  - citizenship
  - "irish-citizenship"
  - "form-8"
  - "reckonable-residence"
sources:
  - https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/become-an-irish-citizen-by-naturalisation/
  - https://www.irishimmigration.ie/naturalisation-residency-calculator/
  - https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/citizenship-frequently-asked-questions/
  - https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/become-an-irish-citizen-by-naturalisation/proofs-of-identity-and-residence/
  - https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/citizenship-ceremonies/
  - https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-foreign-affairs/services/becoming-an-irish-citizen-through-naturalisation/
  - https://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1956/act/26/enacted/en/html
---

# Irish Citizenship by Naturalisation (Form 8)

**Country:** 🇮🇪 Ireland  
**Last verified:** 2026-05-28  
**Estimated time:** Document gathering and identity/residence scoring typically run several months before submission; most applications are then processed within twelve months, with the certificate issued four to six weeks after the citizenship ceremony  
**Cost:** €175 application fee per application (not refunded if refused), plus a certification fee on approval of up to €950 standard, €200 for a widow, widower or surviving civil partner of an Irish citizen, or €0 for a recognised refugee or stateless person

## Required documents

- **Application form** *(Form 8 (Foirm 8))*
  - Required: The standard adult naturalisation application form, available in English (Form 8) and Irish (Foirm 8)
  - Where to get: Apply through the ISD online application system; where online application is not possible, request a paper form through the ISD Customer Service Portal
  - _Note:_ Most applicants apply online. The form is the application by a person of full age for naturalisation as an Irish citizen.
- **Passport**
  - Required: A high-quality colour copy of the passport photo page, signed (certified) by a solicitor or notary
  - Where to get: Held by the applicant; certification by a practising solicitor or notary
  - _Note:_ A passport is the recommended primary identity document. Identity documents are scored against the identity scorecard and must reach a total of 150 points.
- **Identity scorecard documents**
  - Required: One or more documents from the official identity scorecard adding up to a total score of 150 points
  - Where to get: Listed in the ISD Citizenship Guidance Document
  - _Note:_ The certified passport copy usually anchors the identity score; supplement with further scorecard items as needed to reach 150 points.
- **Residence proofs**
  - Required: Documents reaching a score of 150 points for each year of residence claimed
  - Where to get: Household bills (gas, electricity, water, home phone, bin collection, TV licence, cable or satellite subscriptions) and official letters, for example from the Residential Tenancies Board or a hospital
  - _Note:_ Score each claimed residence year separately. A registered immigration permission and Irish Residence Permit evidence the reckonable years already accumulated.
- **Good-character vetting**
  - Required: A report requested from An Garda Síochána about the applicant's background; adult resident applicants are also subject to An Garda Síochána National Vetting Bureau e-vetting
  - Where to get: An Garda Síochána; the e-vetting request is issued by ISD at a later stage of the decision process
  - _Note:_ The vetting disclosure forms part of the good-character assessment. Good character is judged holistically by the Minister, not as a checklist.

## Costs

- **Application fee (per application):** 175 EUR — Charged per application and not refunded if the application is refused — it is the fee for processing, not for success.
- **Certification fee — standard:** 950 EUR — Up to €950 for most applicants. Charged only if the application is approved.
- **Certification fee — widow, widower or surviving civil partner of an Irish citizen:** 200 EUR — Reduced certification fee for a widow, widower or surviving civil partner of an Irish citizen.
- **Certification fee — recognised refugee or stateless person:** 0 EUR — Recognised refugees and stateless persons are exempt from the certification fee; the reckonable-residence rule still applies.

## Steps

### 1. Confirm your reckonable residence using the Naturalisation Residency Calculator

- Enter the dates of each immigration permission you have held into the ISD Naturalisation Residency Calculator
- Check that you have 1,825 or 1,826 days of reckonable residence, including 365 or 366 days of continuous residence in the year immediately before you apply
- Confirm the further four years (1,460 days) fall within the eight years preceding that final continuous year
- Remember that student-permission (Stamp 2) time and any time without valid permission do not count

> **Tip:** Reckonable residence counts time on registered immigration stamps. The years you accumulated while holding an Irish Residence Permit feed directly into this total — see the IRP registration guide for how those years are recorded.

> **If this fails:** Applicants routinely over-estimate their reckonable total. If the calculator falls short, the application is premature — wait until the days are met rather than applying and risking refusal of the €175 fee.

_Links:_
- [ISD — Naturalisation Residency Calculator](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/naturalisation-residency-calculator/)

### 2. Obtain and complete the application (Form 8)

- Apply through the ISD online application system, the route most applicants use
- Where online application is not possible, request a paper form through the ISD Customer Service Portal
- Use the English version (Form 8) or the Irish version (Foirm 8) as you prefer

> **Tip:** Apply online where you can — it is the standard route and the paper form is only issued on request through the Customer Service Portal.

_Links:_
- [ISD — Become an Irish citizen by naturalisation](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/become-an-irish-citizen-by-naturalisation/)

### 3. Assemble identity and residence evidence to the 150-point thresholds

- Have a high-quality colour copy of your passport photo page certified by a solicitor or notary
- Add further identity-scorecard documents until your identity score reaches 150 points
- Gather residence proofs reaching 150 points for each year of residence you claim

> **If this fails:** Submitting too few accepted documents leaves identity or a residence year under-scored and stalls the application. Score each claimed year separately before you submit.

_Links:_
- [ISD — Proofs of identity and residence](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/become-an-irish-citizen-by-naturalisation/proofs-of-identity-and-residence/)

### 4. Pay the application fee and submit

- Pay the application fee of €175, charged per application
- Submit the completed application with your identity and residence evidence

> **Tip:** The €175 fee covers processing and is not returned if the application is refused — make sure your reckonable residence and document scoring are sound before you pay.

### 5. Complete An Garda Síochána e-vetting when requested

- At a later stage of the decision process, ISD requests adult resident applicants to complete e-vetting through the An Garda Síochána National Vetting Bureau
- The resulting vetting disclosure forms part of the good-character assessment

> **If this fails:** A pending or incomplete e-vetting step holds up the decision; respond promptly when the request arrives.

### 6. Receive a decision and, if approved, the certification fee request

- Most applications are processed within twelve months from a complete application
- If approved, ISD requests the certification fee before the certificate is issued
- The certification fee is up to €950 standard, €200 for a widow, widower or surviving civil partner of an Irish citizen, or €0 for a recognised refugee or stateless person

> **Tip:** The Minister has absolute discretion: even where every numeric threshold is met, an application may still be refused on good-character grounds.

### 7. Attend the citizenship ceremony and make the declaration of fidelity

- Attendance at the ceremony is mandatory for successful applicants over 18
- The ceremony is presided over by a judge; candidates take an oath and make the declaration
- Make the *declaration of fidelity* to the Irish nation and loyalty to the State

> **Tip:** Candidates do not become Irish citizens until they have made their declaration — approval is not the final step, and citizenship is conferred only when the declaration is made at the ceremony.

_Links:_
- [ISD — Citizenship Ceremonies](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/citizenship-ceremonies/)

### 8. Receive the certificate of naturalisation

- The certificate of naturalisation is issued by registered post within four to six weeks after the ceremony
- Keep the certificate safe — it is your proof of Irish citizenship for passport and other applications

## FAQ

### Is there a language test for Irish naturalisation?

No. There is no Irish or English language test for naturalisation. Because Ireland is anglophone, this distinguishes the Irish route from many continental European naturalisation routes that require a language certificate.

### How long does the process take?

Most applications for citizenship by naturalisation are processed within twelve months from a complete application. After a successful application, the certificate of naturalisation is issued by registered post within four to six weeks after the citizenship ceremony. Incomplete identity or residence scoring, or a pending e-vetting step, can extend the timeline.

### How many days can I spend outside Ireland in the final year?

You may be away for up to 70 days during the required one-year continuous-residence period, with up to 30 further days allowed in exceptional cases at the discretion of the Minister. Note that some official pages still show an older figure of about six weeks; the current ISD operational rule is the 70-day allowance described here.

### Do I become a citizen as soon as my application is approved?

No. Approval is not the final step. Citizenship is conferred only when you make the declaration of fidelity at the citizenship ceremony, which is mandatory for successful adult applicants. You do not become an Irish citizen until that declaration is made.

### What counts as reckonable residence?

Reckonable residence is time spent legally living in Ireland under qualifying immigration stamps or permissions — not every type of stay counts. You need a total of 1,825 or 1,826 days, made up of 365 or 366 days of continuous residence in the year immediately before applying plus a further 1,460 days (four years) within the preceding eight years. Time on a student permission (Stamp 2) and any time without valid permission are excluded. Long-term residence on Stamp 4 typically counts; the residency calculator confirms your total.

### Are the citizenship rules about to change?

The Minister for Justice, Home Affairs and Migration has received government approval to strengthen migration legislation, including proposals to tighten citizenship criteria — for example a requirement that applicants be self-sufficient. This is government-approved but not yet enacted. The five-year reckonable-residence structure described in this guide remains the current law.

### Is the application fee refundable if I am refused?

No. The €175 application fee covers processing and is not refunded if the application is refused. The certification fee — up to €950 standard, €200 for a widow, widower or surviving civil partner of an Irish citizen, or €0 for a recognised refugee or stateless person — is charged only if the application is approved.

### Does my time on a work permit route count toward citizenship?

Time spent on qualifying registered immigration permissions counts as reckonable residence. Many applicants reach the threshold after moving onto long-term *Stamp 4* residence, which removes the need for ongoing employer sponsorship. The critical skills employment permit guide explains one common route toward Stamp 4.

## Sources

- [Immigration Service Delivery (ISD), Department of Justice, Home Affairs and Migration](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/become-an-irish-citizen-by-naturalisation/) — accessed 2026-05-28 — _T1_ — Standard adult naturalisation is made on Form 8 (English) or Foirm 8 (Irish); applications are submitted through the ISD online system, with a paper form available on request through the Customer Service Portal. The Citizenship Division of ISD processes applications and the Minister for Justice has full discretion to approve or refuse any application. The application fee is €175 per application, with a certification fee on approval of up to €950 for most applicants, €200 for a widow, widower or surviving civil partner of an Irish citizen, and €0 for recognised refugees or stateless persons. There is no Irish or English language test.
- [Immigration Service Delivery (ISD) — Naturalisation Residency Calculator](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/naturalisation-residency-calculator/) — accessed 2026-05-28 — _T1_ — Applicants need 1,825 or 1,826 days of reckonable residence, which includes 365 or 366 days (one year) of continuous residence immediately before the date of application. The calculator checks reckonable residence and is built for non-EU, non-EEA and non-Swiss nationals; it requires supporting documents for each claimed residence year.
- [Immigration Service Delivery (ISD) — citizenship FAQs](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/citizenship-frequently-asked-questions/) — accessed 2026-05-28 — _T1_ — An applicant may be away from Ireland for up to 70 days during the required one-year continuous-residence period, with an extra 30 days allowed in exceptional cases at the discretion of the Minister. Most applications for citizenship by naturalisation are processed within 12 months.
- [Immigration Service Delivery (ISD) — Proofs of identity and residence](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/become-an-irish-citizen-by-naturalisation/proofs-of-identity-and-residence/) — accessed 2026-05-28 — _T1_ — Identity is proved with documents from the identity scorecard totalling 150 points, with a certified colour copy of the passport photo page signed by a solicitor or notary as the recommended primary document. Residence is proved with documents reaching 150 points for each year of residence claimed, including household bills (gas, electricity, water, home phone, bin collection, TV licence, cable or satellite subscriptions) and official letters such as those from the Residential Tenancies Board or a hospital.
- [Immigration Service Delivery (ISD) — Citizenship Ceremonies](https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to-become-a-citizen/citizenship-ceremonies/) — accessed 2026-05-28 — _T1_ — Attendance at a citizenship ceremony is mandatory for successful applicants over the age of 18. Candidates do not become Irish citizens until they have made their declaration. The certificate of naturalisation is issued by registered post within four to six weeks after the ceremony.
- [gov.ie — Department of Foreign Affairs (becoming an Irish citizen through naturalisation)](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-foreign-affairs/services/becoming-an-irish-citizen-through-naturalisation/) — accessed 2026-05-28 — _T1_ — The standard route requires one year (365 days) of continuous residence in the State immediately before the date of application, plus a further four years (1,460 days) of reckonable residence within the preceding eight years. The applicant must be over 18 and of good character, proved in part by requesting a report from An Garda Síochána. There is an application fee of €175 and, if successful, a possible additional fee of up to €950.
- [Irish Statute Book — Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 1956 (as amended)](https://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1956/act/26/enacted/en/html) — accessed 2026-05-28 — _T1_ — The Irish Nationality and Citizenship Act 1956 (as amended) is the governing statute for naturalisation; the residence requirement and the Minister's discretion to grant or refuse derive from this Act and its amendments.

---

Verification pending — see the canonical page for the latest trust state.
Canonical: https://publicservices.guide/ireland/naturalisation-form-8/
