Your great-grandfather was born in Berehove in 1935 - back then it was Hungary. You gathered archival records, ordered a translation of his birth certificate from a regular translator - and at your consulate interview they say: “This translation isn’t accepted, you need one from OFFI or a consul.” Two months wasted, money gone - and you’re starting over. So you don’t end up in that situation, let’s break down the entire process from finding your ancestor’s documents to getting a Hungarian passport.
Who Can Get Hungarian Citizenship by Descent¶
The Hungarian Citizenship Act (2011. évi XLIII. törvény) allows what’s called simplified naturalization (egyszerűsített honosítás). The idea is straightforward: if your ancestor was a Hungarian citizen, you’re entitled to a Hungarian passport. There’s no generational limit either - you can apply even if it was your great-great-grandfather who was Hungarian.
Who Specifically Qualifies¶
You’re eligible for simplified naturalization if:
- Your ancestor was a Hungarian citizen before 1920 (Austro-Hungarian Empire, Kingdom of Hungary)
- Or your ancestor was a Hungarian citizen between 1938 and 1945 (when Transcarpathia was part of Hungary)
- You speak Hungarian at a conversational level
- You have no criminal record and don’t pose a threat to Hungary’s national security
As the official Hungarian Government website states:
A person who was a Hungarian citizen or who is a descendant of a person who was a Hungarian citizen and who speaks Hungarian may apply for simplified naturalisation.
In plain terms: prove your ancestry, speak the language - and the Hungarian passport is yours.
Transcarpathia - the Key Region¶
For Ukrainians, this primarily concerns the Zakarpattia (Transcarpathian) region. Historical territories that were part of Hungary:
| Period | Territory | Modern districts |
|---|---|---|
| Before 1920 (Austria-Hungary) | Subcarpathian Ruthenia | Entire Zakarpattia Oblast |
| 1938-1945 | Carpatho-Ukraine / Subcarpathia | Most of Zakarpattia Oblast |
According to European Pravda, by 2018 over 100,000 Transcarpathian residents had already obtained Hungarian citizenship through the simplified procedure. The number is even higher now.
Tip: even if your ancestors aren’t from Transcarpathia but held Hungarian citizenship (through the Hungarian period in other regions), you can still apply. What matters is the documentary chain.
Full List of Documents for Simplified Naturalization¶
Here’s what you need to collect. Note: there’s NO government fee for submitting the application - the procedure is free.
Applicant’s Documents¶
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Application (EHON kérelem) | Form provided at submission |
| Handwritten autobiography (önéletrajz) | In Hungarian, if applicant is 18+ |
| Birth certificate | Original + Hungarian translation |
| Marriage certificate | If married, original + translation |
| Divorce certificate | If divorced, original + translation |
| Spouse’s death certificate | If widowed |
| Passport | Copy of photo page |
| Photo 3.5×4.5 cm | 2 pieces |
| Adatlap (data sheet) | For registering birth/marriage in the Hungarian system |
Documents Proving Ancestry (Chain of Descent)¶
This is the most critical part. You need to build an unbroken documentary chain from your Hungarian ancestor down to you. For each “link” you need:
- Birth certificate
- Marriage certificate (especially important for female ancestors - to trace surname changes)
- Death certificate (if available)
Example chain for a typical Transcarpathian applicant:
| Generation | Documents |
|---|---|
| Great-grandfather (born before 1920) | Birth certificate or church record, military book, school certificate |
| Grandparent | Birth certificate + marriage |
| Parent | Birth certificate + marriage |
| You | Birth certificate + marriage (if applicable) |
As the official Embassy of Hungary website explains:
The ascendant chain/lineage must be clear - it is not sufficient to attach only the birth certificate of the qualifying ancestor, but it is also necessary to certify the intermediate ascendants.
You can’t just show your great-grandfather’s certificate and yours - every generation in between must be documented. One missing link = rejection.
Alternative Documents for Proof¶
If your ancestor’s birth certificate didn’t survive, these alternatives are accepted:
- Church parish registers (anyakönyvi kivonat) - baptism records
- Ancestor’s military book
- School certificate or report card
- Employment record
- Archival certificate from the State Archives of Zakarpattia Oblast (DAZO)
- Any official document containing the ancestor’s name, date and place of birth
Warning: Hungarian authorities have repeatedly encountered forged archival certificates. As zaholovok.com.ua reports, fraud cases involving documents for Hungarian citizenship have been recorded in Transcarpathia regularly. Don’t turn to “middlemen” who promise to “arrange documents” - that’s a criminal offense in both Ukraine and Hungary.
Translation Requirements: OFFI, Consul or Sworn Translator¶
Here’s where things get tricky. All documents not issued in Hungarian MUST be translated. But not by just any translator.
Who Can Translate Documents for Hungarian Citizenship¶
For the simplified naturalization procedure, Hungary accepts translations from:
1. OFFI (Országos Fordító és Fordításhitelesítő Iroda) - the National Office for Translation and Attestation
This is the state institution with a monopoly on certified (hiteles) translations in Hungary. An OFFI translation is the gold standard - accepted by all Hungarian authorities without question.
2. Hungarian Consul
At Hungarian consulates, the consul can authenticate translations. If you’re submitting your application through a consulate, they can certify the translation on the spot.
3. Sworn translator (hiteles fordító) accredited in Hungary
A translation from a translator registered with OFFI or accredited by Hungary’s Ministry of Justice.
What’s NOT Accepted¶
- Translation by a regular translator in Ukraine (even if notarized)
- Translation by a translation agency without Hungarian accreditation
- Machine translation (even post-edited)
This is a key difference from, say, German sworn translation - Hungary’s system is more centralized.
OFFI Translation Prices¶
OFFI pricing (as of April 2025):
| Service | Cost |
|---|---|
| Minimum price per translation | 5,000 HUF + VAT (~14 EUR) |
| Birth certificate (standard timeline) | 8,800 HUF + VAT (~25 EUR) |
| Birth certificate (urgent, 1 day) | 9,800 HUF + VAT (~28 EUR) |
| Administrative certification fee | 500 HUF + VAT (~1.5 EUR) |
For those affected by the war in Ukraine, there’s a special reduced rate: translation of birth certificates, marriage certificates, passports and driver’s licenses - 5,000 HUF + VAT per document.
The math: for a standard package of 6-10 documents, OFFI translation runs 80-250 EUR. That’s considerably cheaper than the equivalent for Romanian citizenship or German Einbürgerung.
Consulate Translation - an Alternative¶
If you’re submitting through a Hungarian consulate (Berehove, Uzhhorod, Kyiv), the consul can certify translations on the spot. This is convenient because you don’t need to send documents to Budapest.
Tip: if you want to understand your documents beforehand, upload them to ChatsControl - you’ll get a draft translation into Hungarian in minutes. It won’t replace an official OFFI translation, but it’ll help you verify names and dates before submitting.
Language Requirement: How Much Hungarian Do You Need¶
For simplified naturalization, you need to demonstrate conversational knowledge of Hungarian. This is NOT a formal exam with a certificate - it’s a conversation with an official when you submit your application.
What They Actually Check¶
As Wagner & Wagner Law Firm notes:
The required level of language proficiency presupposes intermediate level communication skills in Hungarian, which includes both comprehension and verbal expression.
In practice, this means:
- You should be able to fill out the application form in Hungarian yourself
- Answer simple questions about yourself, your family, your job
- Tell your life story (which you’ve written out by hand beforehand)
- Answer basic questions about Hungary: national symbols, holidays, some history
Typical interview questions: - Mi a neve? (What’s your name?) - Hol és mikor született? (Where and when were you born?) - Mi a foglalkozása? (What do you do for work?) - Miért kéri a magyar állampolgárságot? (Why are you requesting Hungarian citizenship?) - Milyen magyar ünnepeket ismer? (What Hungarian holidays do you know?)
For Transcarpathians - It’s Easier¶
If you’re from Transcarpathia and grew up speaking Hungarian (even at a basic everyday level), that’s usually enough. Most Transcarpathian Hungarians pass the language check without issues.
If you’re NOT from Transcarpathia and starting Hungarian from scratch - plan for 6-12 months of intensive study. Hungarian is substantially different from Slavic languages (it belongs to the Finno-Ugric family), so learning it is harder than, say, Polish or Romanian.
Tip: the hungariancitizenship.eu website has a detailed description of language requirements and sample questions for preparation.
Step-by-Step Process: From Finding Documents to Passport¶
Step 1: Check Your Eligibility (1-2 weeks)¶
Ask older relatives about your ancestry. Check birth certificates of parents, grandparents. The key question: was anyone in your family born in a territory that was part of Hungary at the time of their birth?
If an ancestor was born in Transcarpathia before 1920 or between 1938-1945 - you’ve got a shot.
Step 2: Gather Documents (1-6 months)¶
This is the longest and most complex stage.
Birth/marriage certificates - order through DRACS or local registry offices. Post-1991 documents are quick - 1-2 weeks.
Archival documents of ancestors - contact the State Archives of Zakarpattia Oblast (DAZO). DAZO holds 1,383,401 files, including documents from early medieval times. Pre-1946 documents are stored at the Berehove branch.
Common issues: - Great-grandfather’s certificate didn’t survive - order an archival certificate from DAZO - Ancestor’s name is spelled differently across documents (in Hungarian, Ukrainian, Russian) - you’ll need an additional certificate of name equivalence - Church parish register is only in the archive - submit a request for a certified copy
Step 3: Translate Everything into Hungarian (2-4 weeks)¶
All non-Hungarian documents need translation through OFFI or authentication by a Hungarian consul. The best strategy is to submit your application through a consulate where they’ll certify translations on the spot.
Step 4: Submit Your Application (1 day)¶
Applications must be submitted in person:
| Submission location | For whom |
|---|---|
| Hungarian Consulate in Berehove | Transcarpathians (most convenient) |
| Hungarian Consulate in Uzhhorod | Transcarpathians |
| Embassy of Hungary in Kyiv | Ukrainians from other regions |
| Kormányablak (government window) in Hungary | If you’re already in Hungary |
At submission, you’ll go through a language check - a short conversation in Hungarian, about 10-15 minutes.
Important: there’s NO government fee for the application. The procedure is free.
Step 5: Wait for a Decision (3-8 months)¶
After submission, the Minister responsible for citizenship forwards the application to the President of Hungary within 3 months, with a possible 3-month extension. Typical practical timeline: 3-8 months.
Step 6: Oath (eskü) - 1-3 months after the decision¶
After a positive decision, you need to take an oath of allegiance to Hungary. You can do this at a Hungarian consulate abroad or at a municipal office (polgármesteri hivatal) in Hungary.
Critically important: if you don’t take the oath within 1 year of the decision, the naturalization document becomes void.
Step 7: Get Your Passport (2-4 weeks after oath)¶
After the oath, you’re a Hungarian citizen. You apply for a személyi igazolvány (ID card) and útlevél (passport). An EU passport - which lets you live and work in any European Union country.
Overall Timeline¶
| Stage | Duration |
|---|---|
| Eligibility check and document gathering | 1-6 months |
| Translation | 2-4 weeks |
| Application submission + language check | 1 day |
| Application review | 3-8 months |
| Oath | 1-3 months |
| Passport | 2-4 weeks |
| Total | 6-18 months |
Dual Citizenship: Do You Need to Give Up Ukrainian¶
Short answer: no.
Hungary fully allows dual citizenship. Ukraine, as of January 16, 2026, also officially permits multiple citizenship.
There’s a nuance though: Hungary isn’t yet on Ukraine’s approved list of countries for the simplified dual citizenship procedure (unlike Canada, the US, Germany, Poland, and the Czech Republic). The list is expected to expand, but for now the formal notification process may be more complex. The fact of holding two passports itself is legal.
Common Mistakes and Pitfalls¶
Mistake 1: Wrong Translation¶
The most common mistake - ordering a translation from a regular translator or agency in Ukraine. Hungarian authorities accept ONLY translations from OFFI, a consul, or an accredited Hungarian translator. Notarization by a Ukrainian translator won’t help here.
Mistake 2: Gap in the Document Chain¶
If there’s even one generation between you and your Hungarian ancestor without a document - your application won’t be accepted. Verify the chain BEFORE submitting.
Mistake 3: Insufficient Language Preparation¶
Some applicants think a few memorized phrases will be enough. It doesn’t work that way - the officer asks follow-up questions and expects natural responses.
Mistake 4: Forged Documents¶
Fraud with archival certificates is a real problem in Transcarpathia. Getting caught = criminal case + lifetime ban on Hungarian citizenship.
Mistake 5: Missed Oath Deadline¶
After a positive decision, you have exactly 1 year to take the oath. Miss it - the decision is annulled and you start over.
Total Cost Breakdown¶
| Expense | Approximate cost |
|---|---|
| Duplicate certificates in Ukraine | 200-600 UAH each |
| Archival certificates (DAZO) | 300-1,000 UAH each |
| OFFI translation (6-10 documents) | 80-250 EUR |
| Government application fee | Free |
| Trip to consulate/Hungary | 50-500 EUR |
| Hungarian language courses (if needed) | 200-1,000 EUR |
| Total (without a lawyer) | ~300-1,500 EUR |
| Legal assistance (optional) | 1,000-3,000 EUR |
Compared to other EU citizenship-by-descent programs, Hungary’s procedure is one of the cheapest. For comparison: Romanian citizenship costs 800-1,500 EUR without a lawyer, and Italian jure sanguinis can run 2,000-5,000 EUR.
Want to save on understanding your documents? Upload archival certificates and records to ChatsControl - you’ll get a preliminary translation in minutes.
Where to Find Help and Documents¶
Archives in Ukraine¶
| Archive | What it holds | Contact |
|---|---|---|
| DAZO (State Archives of Zakarpattia Oblast) | 1.38M files from medieval times to 21st century | Uzhhorod, 14a Mynaiska St. |
| DAZO, Berehove branch | Documents up to 1946 | Berehove |
| DRACS | Certificates for the last 75 years | Regional offices |
| TSDAVO | Central administrative records | Kyiv |
Hungarian Diplomatic Missions in Ukraine¶
- Embassy of Hungary in Kyiv - for applicants from all of Ukraine
- Consulate in Berehove - the most popular for Transcarpathians
- Consulate in Uzhhorod - alternative for Transcarpathia
Useful Online Resources¶
- hungariancitizenship.eu - independent guide to the procedure
- offi.hu - official OFFI website (translations)
- dazo.gov.ua - State Archives of Zakarpattia Oblast
- njt.hu - Hungarian legislation online
FAQ¶
How long does it take to get Hungarian citizenship by descent?¶
From starting to gather documents to getting your passport - realistically 6-18 months. The application review itself takes 3-8 months, but before that you need to gather documents (1-6 months, depending on archival search complexity) and get translations done (2-4 weeks). After a positive decision, add 1-3 months for the oath and 2-4 weeks for the passport.
Do I need to speak Hungarian for citizenship by descent?¶
Yes. For simplified naturalization, you need to demonstrate conversational Hungarian - roughly B1 level. It’s not a formal exam - it’s a conversation with an official when you submit your application. You need to answer simple questions about yourself, your family, and why you want citizenship. For Transcarpathian Hungarians with everyday language skills, this usually isn’t a problem. Starting from scratch? Plan for 6-12 months of study.
How much does document translation cost for Hungarian citizenship?¶
Translation through OFFI costs from 5,000 HUF + VAT (~14 EUR) per document, with a standard certificate at 8,800 HUF + VAT (~25 EUR). For a full package of 6-10 documents, expect 80-250 EUR. War-affected Ukrainians get a reduced rate of 5,000 HUF + VAT per certificate.
Do I need to live in Hungary to get citizenship by descent?¶
No. Simplified naturalization does NOT require residency in Hungary. You can submit your application through a Hungarian consulate in Ukraine, pass the language check, and take the oath - all without relocating. That’s one of the main advantages of Hungary’s program.
Do I need to renounce Ukrainian citizenship?¶
No. Hungary allows dual citizenship, and Ukraine has officially recognized multiple citizenship since 2026. Hungary isn’t yet on Ukraine’s approved list for the simplified dual citizenship procedure, but holding two passports is perfectly legal.
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