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Foreign Birth Registration

Forum to discuss all things Blarney | Ireland immigration

Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator

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Hachimaru
Newbie
Posts: 42
Joined: Wed Jul 17, 2024 5:43 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Hachimaru » Sun Nov 24, 2024 12:48 pm

FYI post


To date this year, over 29,000 entries have been made to the Foreign Birth Register.



2024

Jan
2,656

Feb
3,280

Mar
2,277

Apr
2,682

May
6,380

Jun
3,892

Jul
3,847

Aug
3,379

Sep
3,722

Oct
3,258


There are currently 116 staff assigned to Foreign Birth Registration, the breakdown by grade is outlined in the table below.

Higher Executive Officer

3

Executive Officer

13

Clerical Officer/Temporary Clerical Officer

100

FBRhopeful
Newly Registered
Posts: 4
Joined: Mon Mar 04, 2024 5:57 pm
United States of America

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by FBRhopeful » Sat Nov 30, 2024 4:24 pm

Hi all,

Update on my journey:

Application online date: Jan 19 2024
Application received confirmation email: Feb 28 2024
No address check
Congratulations email: Nov 22 2024
Certificate arrived: Nov 29 2024 (dated Nov 4)

!!! Very happy and excited, thanks to everyone who has posted as it was a real help. Good luck to everyone!

Question on the passport process. I don’t have my US passport yet, the website says your national passport can serve as a form of identification but it also gives the option on a social security card. Does that apply to US folks since our social security card is not a photo identification? Would love to do both passports simultaneously to reduce time waiting so any insights are appreciated!

jgclancy
Member of Standing
Posts: 397
Joined: Thu Jul 18, 2019 1:52 am
United States of America

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by jgclancy » Sat Nov 30, 2024 4:36 pm

FBRhopeful wrote:
Sat Nov 30, 2024 4:24 pm
Hi all,

Update on my journey:

Application online date: Jan 19 2024
Application received confirmation email: Feb 28 2024
No address check
Congratulations email: Nov 22 2024
Certificate arrived: Nov 29 2024 (dated Nov 4)

!!! Very happy and excited, thanks to everyone who has posted as it was a real help. Good luck to everyone!

Question on the passport process. I don’t have my US passport yet, the website says your national passport can serve as a form of identification but it also gives the option on a social security card. Does that apply to US folks since our social security card is not a photo identification? Would love to do both passports simultaneously to reduce time waiting so any insights are appreciated!
Congrats!
Do you have a Driver License or Non Driver LIcense ID? If so, get that Notarized & send SS card too. You can order a free SS card once a year BTW Include a note that you do not have a USA passport.

Good Luck...jgclancy

mrnorman01
Newly Registered
Posts: 6
Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2024 12:03 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by mrnorman01 » Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:12 pm

Application online date: 9th Feb 2024
Application put in mail: 12th Feb 2024
Application received confirmation email: 4th March 2024
No address check
Congratulations email: 28th Nov 2024
Certificate arrived: 3rd Dec 2024 (dated 7th Nov)

jgclancy
Member of Standing
Posts: 397
Joined: Thu Jul 18, 2019 1:52 am
United States of America

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by jgclancy » Thu Dec 05, 2024 1:48 am

mrnorman01 wrote:
Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:12 pm
Application online date: 9th Feb 2024
Application put in mail: 12th Feb 2024
Application received confirmation email: 4th March 2024
No address check
Congratulations email: 28th Nov 2024
Certificate arrived: 3rd Dec 2024 (dated 7th Nov)
Congrats!
On to the passport?
To do online application part you'll need a digital passport photo to upload & numbers on the FBR certificate

jgclancy

bogtrotter
Newly Registered
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Feb 29, 2024 10:29 pm
Ireland

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by bogtrotter » Thu Dec 05, 2024 4:36 pm

Application & payment: 22nd Jan 2024
Documents sent via USPS (USA Pacific Northwest): 1st Feb 2024
Documents delivered to DFA: 9th Feb 2024
Documents "received" email from DFA: 28th Feb 2024
Additional document request: No
Address confirmation: No
Approval email: 30th Nov 2024

Now awaiting docs. Was surprised how long it took for DFA to go from delivered status to "received", but weren't in a hurry as this was for 10yr old daughter.

bogtrotter
Newly Registered
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Feb 29, 2024 10:29 pm
Ireland

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by bogtrotter » Thu Dec 05, 2024 4:50 pm

Hachimaru wrote:
Sun Nov 24, 2024 12:48 pm
FYI post


To date this year, over 29,000 entries have been made to the Foreign Birth Register.



2024

Jan
2,656

Feb
3,280

Mar
2,277

Apr
2,682

May
6,380

Jun
3,892

Jul
3,847

Aug
3,379

Sep
3,722

Oct
3,258


There are currently 116 staff assigned to Foreign Birth Registration, the breakdown by grade is outlined in the table below.

Higher Executive Officer

3

Executive Officer

13

Clerical Officer/Temporary Clerical Officer

100

The geek in me had to dig in and estimate processing time for each FBR application (presuming this data is correct)... with 100 doing the work and conservatively assuming each get approx 30 days off between official holidays, benefits, sick days, then assuming an 8 hour day it's a little over 6 hours per application. I do wonder how May was accomplished given level staffing; and even summer months have high levels in spite of people taking time off. Anyhooo.

Roustiere
Newly Registered
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Dec 06, 2024 11:51 am
Ireland

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Roustiere » Fri Dec 06, 2024 12:17 pm

Today I have received my certificate. Below is my timeline.

Applied online: 02-Feb-2024
Application form & Docs posted: 20-Feb-2024
Application form & Docs Delivered: 11-Mar-2024
Address Check: N/A
Congrats email: 03-Dec-2024
Certificate Received: 06-Dec-2024
Date on Certificate: 11-Nov-2024

However, I may have to contact them about an error on my certificate, although I am still unsure on whether it’s a mistake or intended. The certificate includes my middle name, which I no longer use and have had removed from all official documentation a few years back. On the application form I had completed the section “Now known as different” under the “Name on birth certificate” section to highlight that it’s different. All documents sent with my application do not show a middle name (except birth certificate) and I even included the deed poll from when I had removed it.

I’m not sure whether to contact them about this because if it doesn’t interfere with the passport application then i am fine with it but if there’s a chance the passport office will print my middle name on the passport because of this then I will likely want to get in touch and have them fix it.

Mr_Knight
Member
Posts: 173
Joined: Fri Dec 11, 2020 10:55 pm
Location: UK
Mood:
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Mr_Knight » Fri Dec 06, 2024 5:10 pm

Roustiere wrote:
Fri Dec 06, 2024 12:17 pm
Today I have received my certificate. Below is my timeline.

Applied online: 02-Feb-2024
Application form & Docs posted: 20-Feb-2024
Application form & Docs Delivered: 11-Mar-2024
Address Check: N/A
Congrats email: 03-Dec-2024
Certificate Received: 06-Dec-2024
Date on Certificate: 11-Nov-2024

However, I may have to contact them about an error on my certificate, although I am still unsure on whether it’s a mistake or intended. The certificate includes my middle name, which I no longer use and have had removed from all official documentation a few years back. On the application form I had completed the section “Now known as different” under the “Name on birth certificate” section to highlight that it’s different. All documents sent with my application do not show a middle name (except birth certificate) and I even included the deed poll from when I had removed it.

I’m not sure whether to contact them about this because if it doesn’t interfere with the passport application then i am fine with it but if there’s a chance the passport office will print my middle name on the passport because of this then I will likely want to get in touch and have them fix it.
Dont waste your time contacting them, they didnt make a mistake. Your FBR certificate will show the EXACT name as on your original Birth Certificate. When you apply for your Irish passport you just omit the middle name and it will not be a problem.

Hachimaru
Newbie
Posts: 42
Joined: Wed Jul 17, 2024 5:43 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Hachimaru » Sat Dec 07, 2024 9:18 am

The geek in me had to dig in and estimate processing time for each FBR application (presuming this data is correct)... with 100 doing the work and conservatively assuming each get approx 30 days off between official holidays, benefits, sick days, then assuming an 8 hour day it's a little over 6 hours per application. I do wonder how May was accomplished given level staffing; and even summer months have high levels in spite of people taking time off. Anyhooo.
[/quote]

yes take ur point , I would speculate the title of temp clerical officer allows the number to ebb and flow as needed .
The backlog was huge after the pandemic return to work so it would suggest they employed a few hundred ?
temp clerical officers as needed

CA2IE
Newly Registered
Posts: 19
Joined: Mon Aug 26, 2024 7:27 pm
Ireland

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by CA2IE » Tue Dec 10, 2024 4:06 am

Hello all, I apologise in advance for asking a question that I'm certain has been asked 100 times already, but I didn't feel like reading through the previous 311 pages on this thread!!

So here's my question. How can I check to see if a now deceased relative had been placed on the FBR at the time of their birth? Is there a link where I can do a search? many thanks in advance.

duffy1867
Member
Posts: 109
Joined: Sun Dec 20, 2020 10:39 pm
European Union

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by duffy1867 » Tue Dec 10, 2024 10:41 pm

CA2IE wrote:
Tue Dec 10, 2024 4:06 am
Hello all, I apologise in advance for asking a question that I'm certain has been asked 100 times already, but I didn't feel like reading through the previous 311 pages on this thread!!

So here's my question. How can I check to see if a now deceased relative had been placed on the FBR at the time of their birth? Is there a link where I can do a search? many thanks in advance.
I don’t think you can access a system to check, however you can request a ‘replacement’ certificate

www.ireland.ie/en/dfa/citizenship/born- ... ign-birth/

There is some information about how you might go about this, including the deceased, however practically, unless you think the deceased relative in question had an Irish passport etc, I think the chances are thin at best

As a line of last resort you could certainly make the request to check, but possibly long winded…

Good Luck to you

Mr_Knight
Member
Posts: 173
Joined: Fri Dec 11, 2020 10:55 pm
Location: UK
Mood:
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Mr_Knight » Tue Dec 10, 2024 10:50 pm

CA2IE wrote:
Tue Dec 10, 2024 4:06 am
How can I check to see if a now deceased relative had been placed on the FBR at the time of their birth? Is there a link where I can do a search? many thanks in advance.
Contacting the DFA to see if said person was registered in the FBR seems like the only option. I have read before people can search the FBR in an Irish embassy/consulate for a small fee but I dont know if its true.

CA2IE
Newly Registered
Posts: 19
Joined: Mon Aug 26, 2024 7:27 pm
Ireland

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by CA2IE » Thu Dec 12, 2024 5:16 am

Mr_Knight wrote:
Tue Dec 10, 2024 10:50 pm
CA2IE wrote:
Tue Dec 10, 2024 4:06 am
How can I check to see if a now deceased relative had been placed on the FBR at the time of their birth? Is there a link where I can do a search? many thanks in advance.
Contacting the DFA to see if said person was registered in the FBR seems like the only option. I have read before people can search the FBR in an Irish embassy/consulate for a small fee but I dont know if its true.
Thank you very much, Mr. Knight!

CA2IE
Newly Registered
Posts: 19
Joined: Mon Aug 26, 2024 7:27 pm
Ireland

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by CA2IE » Thu Dec 12, 2024 5:17 am

duffy1867 wrote:
Tue Dec 10, 2024 10:41 pm
CA2IE wrote:
Tue Dec 10, 2024 4:06 am
Hello all, I apologise in advance for asking a question that I'm certain has been asked 100 times already, but I didn't feel like reading through the previous 311 pages on this thread!!

So here's my question. How can I check to see if a now deceased relative had been placed on the FBR at the time of their birth? Is there a link where I can do a search? many thanks in advance.
I don’t think you can access a system to check, however you can request a ‘replacement’ certificate

www.ireland.ie/en/dfa/citizenship/born- ... ign-birth/

There is some information about how you might go about this, including the deceased, however practically, unless you think the deceased relative in question had an Irish passport etc, I think the chances are thin at best

As a line of last resort you could certainly make the request to check, but possibly long winded…

Good Luck to you
Thank you very much, Duffy1867 !

Clubhouse8
Newly Registered
Posts: 1
Joined: Mon Dec 16, 2024 11:05 am
England

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Clubhouse8 » Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:11 am

Hi all,

I hope you’re doing well.

I’m seeking advice about my eligibility to register on the Foreign Births Register (FBR) and whether this is worth pursuing, given my family’s history and the documentation I have.

Background:
I am the grandson of an Irish-born grandfather. My grandfather was born with the surname “Rafter,” to a mother whose maiden name was “Foote.” She married my great-grandfather, also a “Rafter.” I have supporting birth and marriage certificates as evidence of these details.

When my grandfather was a child, his mother left Ireland with him and his siblings, fleeing her husband. She moved to England with another man, who was known by the surname “Duffy.”

Subsequently, both my great-grandmother and my grandfather began using the name “Duffy,” even though this change was informal and undocumented. My grandfather regarded his stepfather as his father, as he was raised by him.

This means that although my grandfather’s birth records and early history align with the name “Rafter,” the family name later changed to “Duffy.”

Concern:
I am worried about whether this name change, and the lack of formal documentation surrounding it, might affect my ability to prove my lineage and eligibility for Irish citizenship through my grandfather.

Any insights or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Best regards,
A hopeful

Hachimaru
Newbie
Posts: 42
Joined: Wed Jul 17, 2024 5:43 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Hachimaru » Wed Dec 18, 2024 2:07 pm

Clubhouse8 wrote:
Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:11 am
Hi all,

I hope you’re doing well.

I’m seeking advice about my eligibility to register on the Foreign Births Register (FBR) and whether this is worth pursuing, given my family’s history and the documentation I have.

Background:
I am the grandson of an Irish-born grandfather. My grandfather was born with the surname “Rafter,” to a mother whose maiden name was “Foote.” She married my great-grandfather, also a “Rafter.” I have supporting birth and marriage certificates as evidence of these details.

When my grandfather was a child, his mother left Ireland with him and his siblings, fleeing her husband. She moved to England with another man, who was known by the surname “Duffy.”

Subsequently, both my great-grandmother and my grandfather began using the name “Duffy,” even though this change was informal and undocumented. My grandfather regarded his stepfather as his father, as he was raised by him.

This means that although my grandfather’s birth records and early history align with the name “Rafter,” the family name later changed to “Duffy.”

Concern:
I am worried about whether this name change, and the lack of formal documentation surrounding it, might affect my ability to prove my lineage and eligibility for Irish citizenship through my grandfather.

Any insights or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Best regards,
A hopeful
Quite a coincidence the post immediately preceding yours was thanking a Duffy !

As a first input I'm sure others will correct anything wrong I state.
The proof they are looking for is linial progression Birth ,Marrage, Death/current ID from grandfather to you . So if any of those docs are not showing that because of name changes not through marriage Then you probably will have issues and will require somthing authentic/legal to show there was a legal reason why names do not follow lineage

Hachimaru
Newbie
Posts: 42
Joined: Wed Jul 17, 2024 5:43 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Hachimaru » Thu Dec 19, 2024 9:02 am

Hachimaru wrote:
Wed Dec 18, 2024 2:07 pm
Clubhouse8 wrote:
Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:11 am
Hi all,

I hope you’re doing well.

I’m seeking advice about my eligibility to register on the Foreign Births Register (FBR) and whether this is worth pursuing, given my family’s history and the documentation I have.

Background:
I am the grandson of an Irish-born grandfather. My grandfather was born with the surname “Rafter,” to a mother whose maiden name was “Foote.” She married my great-grandfather, also a “Rafter.” I have supporting birth and marriage certificates as evidence of these details.

When my grandfather was a child, his mother left Ireland with him and his siblings, fleeing her husband. She moved to England with another man, who was known by the surname “Duffy.”

Subsequently, both my great-grandmother and my grandfather began using the name “Duffy,” even though this change was informal and undocumented. My grandfather regarded his stepfather as his father, as he was raised by him.

This means that although my grandfather’s birth records and early history align with the name “Rafter,” the family name later changed to “Duffy.”

Concern:
I am worried about whether this name change, and the lack of formal documentation surrounding it, might affect my ability to prove my lineage and eligibility for Irish citizenship through my grandfather.

Any insights or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Best regards,
A hopeful
Quite a coincidence the post immediately preceding yours was thanking a Duffy !

As a first input I'm sure others will correct anything wrong I state.
The proof they are looking for is linial progression Birth ,Marrage, Death/current ID from grandfather to you . So if any of those docs are not showing that because of name changes not through marriage Then you probably will have issues and will require somthing authentic/legal to show there was a legal reason why names do not follow lineage
Reading through this again I think at least a free consultation with a pro immigration solicitor is needed as and whether they think a sworn affidavit would be enough ? or what else? I would be prepared to be on the DFA carousel for years -
Good luck

duffy1867
Member
Posts: 109
Joined: Sun Dec 20, 2020 10:39 pm
European Union

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by duffy1867 » Thu Dec 19, 2024 2:43 pm

Clubhouse8 wrote:
Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:11 am
I am the grandson of an Irish-born grandfather. My grandfather was born with the surname “Rafter,” to a mother whose maiden name was “Foote.” She married my great-grandfather, also a “Rafter.” I have supporting birth and marriage certificates as evidence of these details.

When my grandfather was a child, his mother left Ireland with him and his siblings, fleeing her husband. She moved to England with another man, who was known by the surname “Duffy.”
I think I agree with Hachimaru - from what you have written, you are eligible, even if proof might be more tricky.

It's going to come down to whether you can prove Duffy and Rafter were the same person, and are linked to you.

Does the Death Certificate make any mention of the former name? If nothing else the first name and dates, place of birth should match across all documents? (i.e. my grandfather's makes reference to his place of birth which can be checked across his marriage, birth certs etc) - they are quite used to discrepancies with name changes (though normally first names for things like this, especially with baptism and given names) - many people have had first name issues that were never even questioned.

I would also have a look for those baptism records, yet another document to add to your case and proof - no idea how to do this sadly, but someone will. jgclancy always talks about providing evidence, evidence and then evidence - and it works for people.

I am guessing the Birth and Death Certificates have the same information except the surname, do you have any other paperwork to demonstrate this - I don't think it's 'too' uncommon for name changes, nearly everyone applying through a grandmother would have at least one name change, maybe three - so no big deal if you can prove the line.

jgclancy
Member of Standing
Posts: 397
Joined: Thu Jul 18, 2019 1:52 am
United States of America

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by jgclancy » Thu Dec 19, 2024 5:17 pm

Clubhouse8 wrote:
Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:11 am
Hi all,

I hope you’re doing well.

I’m seeking advice about my eligibility to register on the Foreign Births Register (FBR) and whether this is worth pursuing, given my family’s history and the documentation I have.

Background:
I am the grandson of an Irish-born grandfather. My grandfather was born with the surname “Rafter,” to a mother whose maiden name was “Foote.” She married my great-grandfather, also a “Rafter.” I have supporting birth and marriage certificates as evidence of these details.

When my grandfather was a child, his mother left Ireland with him and his siblings, fleeing her husband. She moved to England with another man, who was known by the surname “Duffy.”

Subsequently, both my great-grandmother and my grandfather began using the name “Duffy,” even though this change was informal and undocumented. My grandfather regarded his stepfather as his father, as he was raised by him.

This means that although my grandfather’s birth records and early history align with the name “Rafter,” the family name later changed to “Duffy.”

Concern:
I am worried about whether this name change, and the lack of formal documentation surrounding it, might affect my ability to prove my lineage and eligibility for Irish citizenship through my grandfather.

Any insights or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Best regards,
A hopeful
Yes, this name change (not a variation) will pose difficulties. The best you can do is apply & provide everything & anything you can. You will need an affidavit explaining it all & I would advise having it done with a solicitor. If anyone else can provide an affidavit that would be good .The worst they can do is say NO. And remember, that if they do say NO you can appeal. Get everything you can notarized too.
Good Luck jgclancy

BrexitEscapee
- thin ice -
Posts: 127
Joined: Sat Jul 14, 2018 3:54 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by BrexitEscapee » Sat Dec 21, 2024 11:41 am

Clubhouse8 wrote:
Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:11 am
Hi all,

I hope you’re doing well.

I’m seeking advice about my eligibility to register on the Foreign Births Register (FBR) and whether this is worth pursuing, given my family’s history and the documentation I have.

Background:
I am the grandson of an Irish-born grandfather. My grandfather was born with the surname “Rafter,” to a mother whose maiden name was “Foote.” She married my great-grandfather, also a “Rafter.” I have supporting birth and marriage certificates as evidence of these details.

When my grandfather was a child, his mother left Ireland with him and his siblings, fleeing her husband. She moved to England with another man, who was known by the surname “Duffy.”

Subsequently, both my great-grandmother and my grandfather began using the name “Duffy,” even though this change was informal and undocumented. My grandfather regarded his stepfather as his father, as he was raised by him.

This means that although my grandfather’s birth records and early history align with the name “Rafter,” the family name later changed to “Duffy.”

Concern:
I am worried about whether this name change, and the lack of formal documentation surrounding it, might affect my ability to prove my lineage and eligibility for Irish citizenship through my grandfather.

Any insights or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Best regards,
A hopeful
Something odd is happening with this post. When I first read it, it had a spam advertising link (for cheap holiday deals) embedded in it. I posted this reply, but now the link has disappeared. Can anyone else see it?

jgclancy
Member of Standing
Posts: 397
Joined: Thu Jul 18, 2019 1:52 am
United States of America

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by jgclancy » Sat Dec 21, 2024 6:24 pm

BrexitEscapee wrote:
Sat Dec 21, 2024 11:41 am
Clubhouse8 wrote:
Wed Dec 18, 2024 10:11 am
Hi all,

I hope you’re doing well.

I’m seeking advice about my eligibility to register on the Foreign Births Register (FBR) and whether this is worth pursuing, given my family’s history and the documentation I have.

Background:
I am the grandson of an Irish-born grandfather. My grandfather was born with the surname “Rafter,” to a mother whose maiden name was “Foote.” She married my great-grandfather, also a “Rafter.” I have supporting birth and marriage certificates as evidence of these details.

When my grandfather was a child, his mother left Ireland with him and his siblings, fleeing her husband. She moved to England with another man, who was known by the surname “Duffy.”

Subsequently, both my great-grandmother and my grandfather began using the name “Duffy,” even though this change was informal and undocumented. My grandfather regarded his stepfather as his father, as he was raised by him.

This means that although my grandfather’s birth records and early history align with the name “Rafter,” the family name later changed to “Duffy.”

Concern:
I am worried about whether this name change, and the lack of formal documentation surrounding it, might affect my ability to prove my lineage and eligibility for Irish citizenship through my grandfather.

Any insights or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

Best regards,
A hopeful
Something odd is happening with this post. When I first read it, it had a spam advertising link (for cheap holiday deals) embedded in it. I posted this reply, but now the link has disappeared. Can anyone else see it?
It's very odd.
My reply to his post also has an ad but different. I see a reply farther back that has the "family holiday" ad. This one of yours has none that I see.

jgclancy

mrnorman01
Newly Registered
Posts: 6
Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2024 12:03 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by mrnorman01 » Sat Dec 21, 2024 10:22 pm

jgclancy wrote:
Thu Dec 05, 2024 1:48 am
mrnorman01 wrote:
Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:12 pm
Application online date: 9th Feb 2024
Application put in mail: 12th Feb 2024
Application received confirmation email: 4th March 2024
No address check
Congratulations email: 28th Nov 2024
Certificate arrived: 3rd Dec 2024 (dated 7th Nov)
Congrats!
On to the passport?
To do online application part you'll need a digital passport photo to upload & numbers on the FBR certificate

jgclancy
Yep - to add to my dates:

Passport application submitted online: 3rd Dec 2024
Passport application posted from UK: 6th Dec 2024 (international, tracked and signed)
Passport application landed in Dublin: 10th Dec 2024
Passport application received at DFA: 20th Dec 2024 (long time!)
Current Passport ETA (according to the DFA portal): 21st Jan 2025

jophab
Newly Registered
Posts: 8
Joined: Sat Dec 07, 2024 12:47 am
Mood:
United States of America

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by jophab » Thu Jan 02, 2025 9:55 pm

Applied: Feb 17th, 2024
Application received: April 4th, 2024
Approved email: December 8th, 2024.
Received Certificate: December 16, 2024
Passport Application: December 27, 2024

Good luck everyone!

Soontobeirishman
Newly Registered
Posts: 6
Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 3:51 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Foreign Birth Registration

Post by Soontobeirishman » Tue Jan 07, 2025 3:58 pm

Thought I’d give everyone an update on what seemed to me that took a life time.

Application online date: 28 Sep 2023
Posted: Late Oct 2023 (had issues with delivery where it was rejected at Irish customs and returned to the UK, Royal Mail resent it and it was delivered about 3 weeks later.
Application received confirmation: 07 Dec 2023
Request for more Docs: 16 Sep 2024
Posted Additional docs: 18 Sep 2024
Additional docs received: 20 Sep 2024
Address check: 03 Dec 2024
Congratulations email: 06 Jan 2025
Certificate arrived: Awaiting…

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