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Germany granted citizenship to a record 332,500 people in 2025, marking a 14% increase from the previous year. Syrians remained the largest group of new citizens for the fifth consecutive year, accounting for one in every five naturalisations, although the number of Syrians receiving citizenship declined compared to 2024.

The rise in naturalisations was largely driven by reforms introduced in June 2024, which reduced the residency requirement for citizenship from eight years to five and allowed dual citizenship. Many Syrians who arrived during the refugee influx of 2015 and 2016 became eligible under the revised rules.

After Syrians, the largest groups gaining German citizenship were Turkish and Russian nationals. Significant increases were also recorded among citizens from Bosnia, the United States, and Albania. Additionally, Germany saw a sharp rise in citizenship restorations for individuals and descendants of those stripped of their nationality under Nazi rule, reflecting continued efforts to address historical injustices.

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Sweden’s government announced plans to tighten citizenship rules, extending the required residency period from five to eight years, introducing a minimum monthly income threshold of 20,000 Swedish crowns ($2,225), and requiring applicants to pass a language and cultural knowledge test. Migration Minister Johan Forssell said the stricter measures aim to ensure applicants understand Swedish society and meet basic economic and social standards.

The new rules also impose longer waiting periods for individuals with criminal records. For instance, someone who served a four-year prison sentence would have to wait 15 years before applying for citizenship. The changes are part of a broader effort by the centre-right coalition to restrict immigration, which has been a contentious issue in Swedish politics since the large influx of asylum seekers in 2015.

The anti-immigration Sweden Democrats, supporting the minority government, have linked past immigration policies to rising gang-related crime. The stricter citizenship rules are expected to come into force on June 6, coinciding with other planned measures aimed at tightening asylum policies.

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