Slovenia · Citizenship by descent
Exceptional Naturalisation for Persons of Slovene Descent (Article 13)
Open, but far narrower than Croatia's equivalent. Article 13 covers exceptional naturalisation in the national interest; the Slovene-descent variant reaches only the second degree.
Slovenia and Croatia are not comparable on ancestry, and clients shopping the two need to know it. Croatia abolished its generational cap in 2020 and dropped the language test; Slovenia's Article 13 stops at grandchildren and demands five years of documented community involvement. A Slovene great-grandparent is worth nothing here; a Croatian one is worth an EU passport.
Qualifying routes
Child or grandchild only. Requires multi-year active connection with Slovenia and at least 5 years of activity in Slovenian associations, Slovene-language schools or expatriate/minority organisations.
A separate provision requiring 1 year of residence. The interaction between the Article 12 and Article 13 generational limits could not be cleanly resolved from the English text — see watch-outs.
The facts
- Total landed cost
- Administrative fees plus the cost of documenting years of Slovenian community involvement
- Timeline
- 12–36 months — Discretionary; the national-interest assessment is not time-bound
- Physical presence
- Generally 1 year of actual residence, waivable only for those making an exceptional contribution to Slovenia's development or international standing
- Family
- each applicant qualifies separately
- Permanent residency
- n/a — direct citizenship
- Citizenship
- Immediate on approval
- Language test
- Required unless exempt — unlike Croatia's descent route, which eliminated it entirely
- Dual citizenship
- Permitted
- Requirements
- Slovene descent within the applicable degreemulti-year active connection with Sloveniaat least 5 years of activity in Slovenian associations or institutionsgenerally 1 year of actual residence unless waived
- Second degree only — child or grandchild. This is the single most important limit and it is far narrower than the market implies.
- The five-years-of-association-activity requirement is a real, evidence-hungry gate. This is not a mechanical descent test; it is a discretionary national-interest assessment.
- The gov.si English text gives 'second degree' for Article 13 and 'fourth degree' for Article 12 in different places, and the two provisions interact in a way we could not resolve from the English materials. This needs a Slovene-language statutory reading before you rely on either limit.
- Exceptional naturalisation is discretionary. There is no entitlement and limited recourse.
- The upside is real though: exceptional naturalisation carries no renunciation requirement, unlike the ordinary route.