Citizenship lawyers in Athens (2026)
A citizenship lawyer helps you acquire or confirm nationality in Greece — usually through naturalisation after a period of residence, through descent or ancestry, through marriage, or through an investment route where one exists. The lawyer identifies which path you qualify for, tells you what you must prove, assembles the documents in the form the authorities expect, and guides the application through to a decision. For a foreigner, the main benefit is avoiding the missing-document delays and refusals that come from misreading the requirements.
Athens (Voula) practice handling immigration and residence permits, family law, real estate, criminal and commercial matters for Greek and international clients.
Athens boutique firm offering legal services to expats and newcomers in immigration, housing and real estate, family and employment matters.
Athens boutique office serving expats and foreign clients in family, immigration, real estate, inheritance and personal injury matters.
Athens boutique practice for international private clients covering Greek golden visa, property acquisition, citizenship, inheritance and tax.
Athens boutique firm serving the Greek diaspora and foreigners with real estate, inheritance, citizenship, residence permits and tax matters in Greece.
Athens-licensed boutique practice (two named attorneys, dual Greek/US qualified) assisting the Greek diaspora and foreign clients with inheritance, real estate, citizenship and golden visa matters.
Finding a citizenship lawyer in Athens
Acquiring or confirming citizenship in Greece — by naturalisation, descent, marriage or investment — turns on residence history, documents and rules that change over time. A citizenship lawyer in Athens can tell you which route fits, what you must prove, and how to file an application that holds up.
Every firm listed here shows the languages it works in, and handles the citizenship and naturalisation matters foreigners in Athens face most. Contacting a firm is always free, with no obligation.
Frequently asked questions
What documents are usually needed for a citizenship application?
Most applications draw on civil-status records such as birth, marriage and sometimes parents' documents, proof of lawful residence, identity and travel documents, and evidence supporting the specific route you are using. Foreign documents often need official translation and legalisation. A lawyer in Athens can give you a precise checklist and help get documents into an acceptable form.
What can cause a citizenship application to be refused or delayed?
Common problems include gaps or breaks in lawful residence, missing or improperly legalised documents, unmet language or integration requirements where they apply, and inconsistencies between records. A lawyer reviews these risks before you file and can often correct them in advance, which is far easier than challenging a refusal afterward.
Is citizenship by descent different from naturalisation?
Yes. Naturalisation is based on a period of legal residence and meeting set conditions, while descent or ancestry routes depend on your family lineage and may not require living in Greece at all. The evidence and process differ considerably between them, so confirming which route fits your circumstances is one of the first things a citizenship lawyer assesses.
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