EU: Citizenship granted to almost 1 million people in 2022
Brussels: In 2022, 989 000 people acquired the citizenship of the EU country where they lived, an increase of around 20% (+163 100 people) compared with 2021.
Most of the new citizenships (in absolute numbers) were granted by Italy (213 700; 22% of the EU total). Spain (181 800; 18% of the EU total) and Germany (166 600; 17%) granted the second and third highest numbers of new citizenships.
The largest increases in citizenships granted to non-national residents in 2022, when compared with 2021, were recorded in Italy (+92 200), Spain (+37 600), and Germany (+36 600). At the other end of the scale, the largest decreases were noted in France (-15 900), the Netherlands (-9 300), and Portugal (-3 700).
Data show that 87% of all those granted an EU citizenship of the country where they lived were citizens of a non-EU country. Citizens of another EU country than the country of residence accounted for 12%. The rest had either an unknown previous citizenship (1%) or were stateless (0.7%).
This information comes from data on the acquisition of citizenship published by Eurostat today. This article presents just a handful of findings from the more detailed Statistics Explained article.
In 2022, Moroccan residents were the largest group of new EU citizens, with a total of 112 700 citizenship status granted. The second largest group were Syrian nationals with 90 400 granted citizenship, followed by Albanians with 50 300 being granted citizenship.
The naturalisation rate is the ratio of the number of persons who acquired the citizenship of a country where they were living during a year over the stock of non-national residents in the same country at the beginning of the year.
In 2022, Romania recorded the highest naturalisation rate among EU countries, with 26.8 citizenships granted per 100 non-national residents. Sweden stood at 10.6, followed by the Netherlands at 4.4 and Italy at 4.2.
At the other end of the scale, the lowest naturalisation rates per 100 non-national residents were recorded in Latvia and Estonia (both 0.4), Austria and Bulgaria (both 0.7), and Malta and Czechia (both 0.8).