American families pursuing Italian citizenship say they have been left shocked and frustrated after Italy’s tougher ancestry based citizenship rules shut the door on many long running applications. Italy changed its law in March 2025, limiting eligibility mainly to people with an Italian parent or grandparent, a major shift from the old system that allowed claims through more distant ancestry.
The controversy has grown again after Italy’s Constitutional Court upheld the tougher framework in March 2026, reinforcing the government’s effort to narrow who can qualify through jure sanguinis, or citizenship by descent. Reports say the decision could affect millions of people worldwide, including many Americans whose families had already spent years gathering records, paying legal fees, and following official procedures.
For many applicants, the anger is not only about losing citizenship hopes, but about the timing. Families say they did everything Italian authorities required, including tracing family documents and filing through the proper channels, only to see the rules change while their cases were still in progress. Critics argue the crackdown unfairly punishes descendants who had relied on the previous system in good faith.
Italy’s government has defended the changes by saying the old system was being overwhelmed by applicants with only distant links to the country. Reuters reported last year that officials wanted to curb what they described as tenuous descendant claims, reduce pressure on consulates and town halls, and stop abuse of the process by people seeking an EU passport without a meaningful connection to Italy.
The issue has also exposed a deeper debate about identity and belonging in Italy. While descendants abroad have faced tighter limits, critics note that children born and raised in Italy to foreign parents still face a long path to citizenship, making the politics of nationality even more contentious.
For affected American families, the crackdown has turned what was meant to be a path to heritage and legal recognition into a battle over shifting rules, fairness, and whether years of effort can suddenly be wiped away by political change. This final point is a synthesis based on the reported experiences of applicants and the legal changes now upheld by the court.

