Having nine passports is rare; here’s how it could happen

Some 75 percent of countries let their citizens hold foreign passports. Here are some paths to multiple citizenship.

ByManuel Canales and Kelsey Nowakowski
December 12, 2019
This story appears in the January 2020 issue of National Geographic magazine.

Half a century ago, most countries revoked the citizenship of a person who became a national of another country. Today some 75 percent let their people hold foreign passports, dramatically increasing citizenship options for children. There are more paths to citizenship in European countries, fewer in the Americas (although birthright citizenship is more common), and limited routes in nondemocratic countries, says Maarten Vink, of Maastricht University. Having nine passports is rare; here’s how it could happen.