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Germans becoming US Citizens

Should German Citizens in the US Consider American Citizenship?

Benefits, Responsibilities, Germany-Related Implications When Becoming a US Citizen

by Dr. William Sen

For many years, German citizens often delayed US naturalization because German law could treat voluntary naturalization as a loss of German citizenship unless a Beibehaltungsgenehmigung had been granted beforehand.

That hurdle is largely gone. I talked about that in my last blog post: What German Citizens in California Need to Know About US Citizenship

The Benefits of Us Citizenship for German Citizens

US citizenship is not just a stronger immigration status. It is a different legal category with a different bundle of rights.

Key benefits that often matter in California life planning include:

  • Stronger Right to Stay In the US
    A US citizen cannot be removed from the United States for immigration-status reasons ever!
    A green card is durable, but it is still a status with conditions (including rules around abandonment and certain criminal or immigration violations).
  • A US Passport Provides Easier Travel Logistics
    A US citizen can obtain a US passport and, as a general rule, must use it to enter and leave the United States. This matters for dual nationals who travel frequently.
  • Broader Access to Certain Jobs and Clearances
    Some government jobs and roles requiring specific clearances are limited to US citizens.
  • More Family Immigration Options
    US citizens generally have broader options to petition for certain family members than permanent residents do (details vary by category).
  • Voting and Civic Participation
    US citizenship gives the right to vote in federal elections and participate fully in civic life in ways not available to permanent residents.

Political Uncertainty: The Structural Difference Between a Green Card and Citizenship

Political uncertainty refers to a very concrete legal distinction: permanent residency is an immigration status granted under statutory and regulatory frameworks that can be changed, interpreted, or administratively slowed. Citizenship, by contrast, is a constitutional status.

A green card is called “permanent,” but it is not unconditional. It must be renewed periodically (the physical card typically every 10 years), and permanent residents remain subject to immigration law. Their status can be questioned in removal proceedings under certain circumstances, such as prolonged absence from the United States, specific criminal convictions, or findings of abandonment.

US citizenship operates on an entirely different legal level. A US citizen has an absolute right to reside in the United States. That right is not dependent on visa categories, renewal cycles, or discretionary immigration processing. A US Citizen cannot be deported.

Immigration policy can shift with new administrations, new legislation, or court rulings. Processing rules, enforcement priorities, and procedural interpretations can change. It is a fact that non-citizens remain within the immigration system, and citizens do not.

For example, administrative backlogs or procedural changes can affect how quickly applications or renewals are processed. Court decisions can temporarily pause certain immigration programs or reinterpret eligibility standards. Legislative amendments can adjust grounds of removability or admissibility. All of these dynamics apply to non-citizens, including permanent residents.

Citizenship removes that layer of uncertainty. Once naturalized, your right to live in the United States is no longer contingent on immigration administration. It is grounded in constitutional protection rather than immigration permission.

For German citizens living long-term in San Diego or elsewhere in California, this distinction is often central to the decision. Permanent residency can be stable for decades. However, it remains an immigration benefit.

Choosing to naturalize is therefore not only about voting rights or a US passport. It is about converting a revocable immigration status into a fundamentally protected legal status in the United States.

Duties and Responsibilities That Come With US Citizenship

US citizenship also brings real obligations. The most important ones to understand before applying are taxes, legal duties, and practical travel rules:

Worldwide Taxation and Reporting

The United States taxes US citizens on worldwide income, even when living abroad. That includes the obligation to file US tax returns based on US rules, with potential relief mechanisms like foreign tax credits or exclusions depending on the situation.

For many German citizens, this is the single biggest long-term tradeoff of becoming a US citizen, especially if there is a realistic chance of moving back to Germany or holding significant assets and accounts outside the US.

  • Foreign Accounts Reporting (FBAR)
    This is common for people with German bank accounts. US persons may have additional reporting duties for non-US financial accounts, including FBAR (FinCEN Form 114) in relevant cases.
  • Jury Duty
    Jury service is a common civic responsibility associated with US citizenship.
  • Selective Service Registration
    US law requires Selective Service registration for people classified as male under US rules, generally within the 18 to 25 age range, including naturalized citizens.
  • The Naturalization Oath
    Naturalization includes taking the Oath of Allegiance, which includes language about renouncing prior allegiances. This is part of US naturalization, even when dual citizenship is legally permitted by the countries involved.

What Becoming a US Citizen Changes (And Does Not Change) for Obligations in Germany

This is where many German citizens want clarity: Does US citizenship create new duties in Germany, or change existing ones?

German taxation is primarily residence-based, not citizenship-based: Germany generally taxes based on residence or habitual abode (unlimited tax liability), not simply because a person holds German citizenship. If there is no residence or habitual abode in Germany, German tax obligations typically depend on Germany-source income and specific rules.

So the major shift in worldwide taxation is on the US side after naturalization, not on the German side merely because of dual citizenship.

Voting as a German citizen abroad: German citizens living abroad are not automatically on an electoral register. Voting typically requires applying to be entered in the electoral register for the relevant election. US citizenship does not remove German voting eligibility as long as German citizenship remains.

Military service context: Germany suspended compulsory military service in 2011 (suspended is not the same as abolished). Discussions and legislative steps around service models can evolve. If this topic is relevant to your household, check current rules at the time you make decisions, especially for younger family members.

Practical dual-national travel reality: As a dual national, US rules generally expect use of a US passport to enter and leave the US, while Germany may expect use of a German passport to enter and leave Germany. This is a practical planning point for travel, not a penalty.

Us Citizenship vs. German Citizen With a Green Card in California

Both statuses are strong, but they are not equivalent.

Green Card Strengths
Permanent residency allows living and working in the US long-term and can be a stable foundation for life in San Diego.

Key differences where US citizenship is meaningfully stronger

  • Security of status: citizenship is not a conditional immigration status
  • Permanent residency can be placed at risk by certain actions (including extended time outside the US that can trigger abandonment questions, or certain legal issues). Citizenship is not subject to those same immigration-status vulnerabilities.

Political Rights
Voting and full civic participation: only citizens can vote in federal elections.

Passport and Entry Rules
US citizens can get a US passport and generally must use it to enter/leave the US.

Worldwide Taxation Difference
Green card holders can also face US worldwide taxation while they remain US tax residents under US rules, but citizenship-based taxation is uniquely durable: it can continue even after moving abroad, and ending it can be complex. This is why tax planning is essential before naturalizing.