The Two-Year Residency Exception: The Remaining Pathway for Descendants Beyond the Two-Generation Limit
For descendants beyond the two-generation limit, Law 74/2025 preserves one key exception: if a parent resided in Italy for at least two consecutive years after acquiring citizenship and before the child’s birth. Here’s what counts as residency and how to use this pathway.
Italian Courts Are Splitting on What to Do After the Constitutional Court Ruling: Suspend, Proceed, or Defer?
Italian courts are responding to the Constitutional Court ruling in three different ways: some are proceeding with rulings, some are suspending cases, and others are deferring to fall 2026. Where your case is filed now matters as much as its merits.
Italian Citizenship for Minors After Law 74/2025: The May 31, 2026 Deadline You Cannot Miss
Law 74/2025 created a limited citizenship pathway for minors with strict deadlines. For certain categories, declarations must be submitted by May 31, 2026. The two-year Italian residency requirement makes this pathway impractical for many families abroad.
Venice Court Recognizes Citizenship Despite Tajani Decree in Post-Decree Case: The Full Story
In a case filed November 2025, seven months after the Tajani Decree, Judge Chiara Martin of the Tribunale di Venezia recognized two Brazilian descendants as Italian citizens from birth without referencing Law 74/2025. Case RG 21984/2025, led by attorney Claudio Lagana, involved third and fourth generation descendants. This is not a grandfathered case. It is a direct challenge to the decree that succeeded.
Constitutional Court Rules on D.L. 36/2025: What It Means and Why It Is Far From Over
On March 12, 2026, Italy’s Constitutional Court issued a ruling on the Turin challenge to D.L. 36/2025. Headlines treated it as a final verdict. The reality is far more complex: the full judgment hasn’t been published, broader challenges from Campobasso and Mantova remain pending, and the Court of Cassation hearing on April 14 may be even more consequential.
The Mantova Referral: Ten Constitutional Articles and the Broadest Challenge to D.L. 36/2025
The Tribunal of Mantova has filed the broadest constitutional challenge to Italy’s citizenship reform, invoking ten articles of the Constitution. Among them: the government imposed a deadline that expired before anyone knew it existed. Hearing confirmed June 9, 2026.
