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cross-border child custody italy

How Italy's 2026 Citizenship Changes Affect Cross‑border Child Custody, Relocation and Hague Cases

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Italy’s Budget Law amendments, effective 1 January 2026, have reshaped the rules governing how minors acquire Italian citizenship through descent (iure sanguinis) and when births abroad must be registered with Italian civil‑status authorities. For families with ties to more than one country, these family law changes in Italy carry consequences that extend far beyond nationality paperwork, they directly influence which courts have jurisdiction over cross-border child custody in Italy, whether a relocation application will succeed, and how Hague Convention return proceedings unfold. Constitutional court commentary throughout spring 2026 has added a further layer of interpretive uncertainty, leaving parents and practitioners to navigate a shifting landscape at precisely the moment when custody disputes are most time‑sensitive.

This guide maps the 2026 changes onto the private‑international‑law frameworks that matter most, Brussels II ter, the 1980 Hague Convention, and Italy’s domestic juvenile‑court procedure, and provides practical checklists for parents and family lawyers confronting registration decisions, relocation requests or abduction risks right now.

Readers will find below:

  • A clear summary of the Budget Law changes and their timeline.
  • Analysis of how citizenship status affects jurisdiction in custody and relocation disputes.
  • Practical guidance on Hague return proceedings and international child abduction in Italy.
  • Enforcement checklists for foreign custody orders under Brussels II.
  • Hypothetical case studies illustrating the risks.
  • A FAQ section answering the most common questions parents and lawyers ask.

Key Citizenship and Registration Changes Under the 2026 Budget Law

Summary of the Legislative Change

The provisions affecting Italian citizenship for minors in 2026 were introduced through the annual Budget Law (Legge di Bilancio), published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale and effective from 1 January 2026. In plain terms, the reform tightened the generational limits on citizenship by descent and introduced stricter registration‑timing requirements for minors born outside Italy to Italian‑citizen parents. Where previously a parent could rely on a broad chain of iure sanguinis descent with relatively flexible registration windows, the 2026 amendments impose caps on the number of generations through which citizenship transmits automatically and set firmer deadlines for consular birth registration.

The practical effect is significant: a parent who delays registration, or whose lineage falls outside the newly narrowed generational window, may find that their child is no longer automatically recognised as an Italian citizen. This has immediate repercussions for custody jurisdiction, passport issuance and the enforceability of Italian court orders abroad.

Who Is Affected, Categories of Minors

The family law changes in Italy under the 2026 Budget Law touch several categories of minors:

  • Children born abroad to Italian parents. These minors face the most direct impact. If the Italian parent’s own citizenship was acquired through descent several generations back, the child may no longer qualify automatically under the tighter rules.
  • Children born in Italy to foreign parents. Italy does not grant citizenship by birth on its soil (ius soli), but the 2026 reforms have prompted renewed policy debate and some administrative adjustments to residence‑permit pathways. A foreigner who has a baby in Italy must still follow the existing registration procedure with the local Anagrafe, though the pathway to citizenship remains through residence rather than birth.
  • Adopted children. Inter‑country adoptions formalised through Italian courts continue to confer citizenship, but registering the child born abroad under adoption decrees now requires more rigorous documentation within the consular deadline.
  • Foundlings and stateless minors. Existing protections under Italian law remain, though administrative guidance from the Ministry of Interior is still being updated.

Timeline of Changes and Practical Effects

Date Measure Practical Effect
1 January 2026 Budget Law amendments enter force (registration and descent‑limit provisions) Alters timing for registering minors born abroad and tightens conditions for iure sanguinis citizenship, may affect a parent’s ability to assert Italian jurisdiction or rights
Spring 2026 Constitutional court commentary and press coverage of interim challenges Creates temporary interpretive uncertainty, counsel should take a conservative approach to registration deadlines and travel‑document applications
Ongoing Ministry of Interior administrative guidance pending Expect circulars clarifying consular procedures, practitioners should monitor the Gazzetta Ufficiale and Ministry of Interior channels before filing

Industry observers expect that final administrative circulars will resolve much of the present ambiguity, but until those are published, parents and counsel should proceed on the assumption that the stricter deadlines apply and that documentary evidence of timely registration will be scrutinised in any subsequent custody or jurisdictional proceedings.

How Citizenship Status Affects Jurisdiction in Cross‑Border Child Custody in Italy

Brussels II ter and Jurisdiction Basics

Jurisdiction over cross-border child custody in Italy is governed primarily by the EU’s Brussels II ter Regulation (Council Regulation 2019/1111, which replaced Brussels II bis). Under this framework, jurisdiction in custody matters generally follows the child’s habitual residence, not nationality. An Italian court will have jurisdiction if the child habitually resides in Italy, regardless of whether the child holds Italian citizenship.

However, nationality is not irrelevant. Brussels II ter contains residual rules under which, where habitual residence cannot be established, the courts of the child’s Member State of nationality may assume jurisdiction. This is where the 2026 Budget Law changes create a real shift: if a child who was previously considered an Italian citizen no longer qualifies due to the tighter descent rules, the Italian courts may lose this residual jurisdictional basis. Conversely, a parent who successfully registers the child under the new rules, and thereby secures Italian citizenship, gains access to Italy’s courts even if the child’s habitual residence is elsewhere in the EU.

For cross-border divorce in Italy, jurisdiction over the divorce itself follows a different regulation (Brussels II ter on matrimonial matters), but custody is assessed separately. A parent should never assume that divorce jurisdiction automatically confers custody jurisdiction over the child, they are distinct determinations, and the child’s habitual residence and nationality are analysed independently.

When a Child’s Nationality Alters Enforcement Options

Nationality shapes enforcement in several practical ways:

  • Recognition of foreign guardianship orders. Italian courts apply a public‑order (ordine pubblico) test when deciding whether to recognise foreign custody or guardianship decisions. Where a child is an Italian citizen, courts are more likely to scrutinise whether the foreign order adequately protects the child’s connection to Italy, a consideration that can delay or block recognition.
  • Relocation requests. A parent seeking court permission to relocate an Italian‑citizen child abroad faces a higher evidentiary burden to demonstrate that the move serves the child’s best interests, because the court must weigh the child’s ties to Italy. If the child’s citizenship is contested or has lapsed under the 2026 rules, that calculus shifts.
  • Passport control. An Italian‑citizen child holds (or is entitled to hold) an Italian passport. Under Italian law, both parents must consent to passport issuance for a minor. The 2026 registration changes can affect whether a passport application proceeds at all, which in turn influences a parent’s ability to travel with the child.

The most common custody arrangement in Italy is affidamento condiviso, shared (joint) custody, under which both parents retain parental responsibility and the child typically has a primary residence with one parent while maintaining regular contact with the other. Italian courts have treated joint custody as the default since the 2006 reform (Law No. 54/2006), departing from it only where the child’s welfare demands sole custody. The biggest mistake observed in custody battles is a parent acting unilaterally, relocating, changing schools, or restricting contact, without court authorisation, because Italian judges view such behaviour as evidence against the unilateral parent’s suitability for shared custody.

International Child Abduction in Italy, Hague Convention Implications After the 2026 Changes

Procedure and Timelines in Italy

Italy is a contracting state to the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. The designated Central Authority is the Ministry of Justice (Ministero della Giustizia), which coordinates incoming and outgoing return applications. The procedural framework operates as follows:

  1. Filing. A left‑behind parent files a return application with the Central Authority of the requesting state or directly with the Italian Central Authority. The Ministry of Justice then transmits the application to the competent juvenile court (Tribunale per i Minorenni) in the district where the child is located.
  2. Urgent proceedings. Hague return applications in Italy are handled as urgent matters. The juvenile court is expected to issue a decision within six weeks of receiving the application, though in practice timelines vary. Emergency interim measures, such as orders preventing the child’s further removal or restricting passport use, can be issued at the outset.
  3. Hearing and decision. The juvenile court examines whether the removal or retention was “wrongful” under Article 3 of the Convention (i.e., in breach of custody rights under the law of the child’s habitual residence) and whether any defences under Articles 12, 13 or 20 apply.
  4. Appeal. Decisions are appealable to the Court of Appeal (Corte d’Appello), which also proceeds on an expedited basis.

For detailed procedural guidance, the Ministero della Giustizia’s dedicated page on international child abduction provides official instructions, including contact details for the Central Authority and forms.

Strategy When Citizenship Status Is Contested

The 2026 Budget Law introduces a new variable into Hague proceedings. Where a taking parent argues that the child’s Italian citizenship entitles the child to remain in Italy, or, conversely, where a left‑behind parent claims the child’s recently acquired Italian citizenship establishes habitual residence, the court must untangle citizenship from habitual residence. These are distinct legal concepts, and Italian juvenile courts have consistently held that citizenship alone does not determine habitual residence for Hague purposes. Nevertheless, the practical effect of a child holding an Italian passport and being registered with an Italian Comune can influence the factual assessment of integration.

Common defences in Hague return proceedings include:

  • Article 12, settlement. If more than one year has elapsed since the wrongful removal and the child is settled in the new environment, the court may decline to order return.
  • Article 13(b), grave risk. The taking parent may argue that return exposes the child to physical or psychological harm or an intolerable situation.
  • Child’s objections. Under Article 13, a child of sufficient age and maturity may object to being returned.

Where citizenship status is actively disputed, for example, where one parent contests whether the child was validly registered under the 2026 rules, the juvenile court may need to stay the Hague proceedings pending clarification from the civil‑status authorities or, in extreme cases, from the Constitutional Court. Early indications suggest that courts will resist lengthy stays and will instead proceed on the basis of the child’s current documented status, making prompt registration critically important.

Evidence to gather urgently:

  • Certified copies of the child’s birth certificate and any consular registration documents.
  • Copies of all passports held by the child (Italian, foreign, or both).
  • School enrolment records, medical records and residency certificates in both states.
  • Any existing custody or parental‑responsibility orders from any jurisdiction.
  • Correspondence or travel records showing the child’s habitual patterns of life.

Enforcement of Foreign Custody Orders and Brussels II in Italy

Enforcement Process and Grounds to Resist

Under Brussels II ter, custody orders issued by courts of other EU Member States are, in principle, automatically recognised in Italy without the need for a separate exequatur procedure. A parent holding a foreign EU custody order can present it, together with the standard certificate issued by the court of origin, directly to the Italian enforcement authorities.

However, recognition may be refused on limited grounds, including:

  • Public policy (ordine pubblico). The order manifestly conflicts with Italian public policy, taking into account the child’s best interests.
  • Failure to hear the child. The child was not given an opportunity to be heard, in violation of fundamental procedural principles.
  • Default of appearance. The respondent was not properly served and did not have an opportunity to arrange their defence.
  • Irreconcilability. The order is irreconcilable with a later custody order from Italy or another Member State.

For custody orders from non‑EU states, recognition follows either bilateral treaties (where applicable) or Italian domestic procedure under Law No. 218/1995 on private international law. This process is slower and more procedurally demanding, typically requiring formal recognition proceedings before the Court of Appeal.

Practical Checklist for Lawyers

  • Obtain the original foreign custody order with apostille or legalisation, as applicable.
  • Secure a certified Italian translation of the order and all supporting documents.
  • For EU orders: request the standard Brussels II ter certificate from the issuing court.
  • For non‑EU orders: identify any applicable bilateral treaty; prepare recognition proceedings before the competent Court of Appeal.
  • Verify the child’s current citizenship and registration status under the 2026 rules, this will affect the public‑policy analysis.
  • File any necessary urgent applications (e.g., to prevent the child’s removal pending recognition) with the juvenile court.

Recognition Timelines by Order Type

Order Type Typical Recognition Route in Italy Approximate Timeline
Foreign custody order (EU Member State) Automatic recognition under Brussels II ter (present certificate to enforcement authority) 1–3 months (varies by district)
Foreign custody order (non‑EU state) Formal recognition under bilateral treaty or Law 218/1995 before the Court of Appeal 3–9 months
Hague Convention return order Urgent juvenile court review Days to weeks (urgent track)

Practical Steps for Parents and Counsel Facing Cross‑Border Custody Risks in Italy

Registering a Child Born Abroad, Immediate Steps

If you are an Italian citizen with a child born outside Italy, the single most important step you can take is to register the birth at your nearest Italian consulate within the deadline set by the 2026 Budget Law. Failure to register on time can jeopardise the child’s Italian citizenship and, with it, your ability to rely on Italian jurisdiction in any custody dispute. Gather the following documents before attending the consulate:

  • Original birth certificate issued by the country of birth (with apostille or legalisation).
  • Certified translation of the birth certificate into Italian.
  • Both parents’ passports and proof of Italian citizenship for the Italian parent.
  • Marriage certificate (if applicable) or declaration of parentage.
  • Proof of consular jurisdiction (your registered address within the consulate’s district).

For broader context on registering births abroad, including situations involving children conceived outside marriage, practitioners should consult the existing procedural guidance.

When to File Emergency Hague or Juvenile Court Applications

File immediately, without waiting, if any of the following triggers are present:

  1. The other parent has taken or is planning to take the child out of Italy (or into Italy) without your consent.
  2. The other parent has applied for or obtained a passport for the child without your knowledge.
  3. You have received information that the other parent intends to relocate permanently with the child.
  4. The child has already been wrongfully removed and you are within the one‑year window under Article 12 of the Hague Convention.

In urgent cases, the juvenile court can issue interim protective measures, including orders prohibiting the child’s departure from Italy, seizure of travel documents and supervised‑contact arrangements, within days of an application. For a detailed overview of the criminal sanctions that now apply to unauthorised travel with a minor, including the new family‑law provisions, see the dedicated analysis.

Case Studies, How the 2026 Changes Play Out in Practice

Hypothetical A: Expatriate parent, relocation request. Maria, an Italian citizen living in London, registers her daughter’s birth at the Italian consulate within the new deadline. Maria’s former partner, a British national, subsequently applies to the English court for permission to relocate the child to Australia. Because the child holds Italian citizenship and is registered, Maria can invoke Brussels II ter residual jurisdiction to argue that the Italian courts should also have a say. The likely court analysis would weigh the child’s habitual residence (England) against the nationality connection, and Maria’s prompt registration strengthens her procedural position. Her recommended step: file a mirror application in the Italian juvenile court and notify the English court of the parallel proceedings.

Hypothetical B: Wrongful removal with disputed citizenship. Paolo, who holds Italian citizenship through a multi‑generational descent chain, brings his son to Italy from Germany without the mother’s consent. The mother files a Hague return application. Paolo argues the child is an Italian citizen and has a right to remain. However, under the 2026 rules, the child’s citizenship registration is incomplete because Paolo’s own claim falls outside the tightened generational limit. The juvenile court is likely to treat the child’s habitual residence, Germany, as determinative and order return. Paolo’s disputed citizenship claim will not, on its own, defeat the Hague application.

The recommended step for the mother: gather all documentation showing the child’s German integration and file the return application without delay.

How Italian Courts Treat Relocation Requests After the 2026 Changes

Italian case law consistently treats the child’s best interests as the paramount consideration in relocation decisions, assessed through the lens of joint custody (affidamento condiviso). The court examines whether the proposed move would materially impair the child’s relationship with the non‑relocating parent and whether adequate contact arrangements can be maintained.

Since the 2026 changes, early indications suggest that courts are paying closer attention to the child’s nationality and registration status as part of the broader best‑interests analysis. A child whose Italian citizenship is secure may have stronger ties to Italy in the court’s assessment, making it harder for the relocating parent to demonstrate that departure serves the child’s welfare. Conversely, where citizenship has lapsed or was never established, the argument for relocation to the child’s “other” home country becomes somewhat easier to sustain.

Practitioners handling relocation cases should be prepared to present detailed evidence of the child’s actual connections to Italy, schooling, extended family, language proficiency, healthcare, alongside the citizenship documentation. The likely practical effect of the 2026 reforms will be to make registration status a routine evidentiary issue in relocation hearings, where previously it was rarely contested.

Conclusion, Practical Risk Matrix for Cross‑Border Child Custody in Italy

The 2026 Budget Law has made citizenship registration a front‑line issue in cross-border child custody in Italy. Parents who register promptly and document their child’s Italian nationality gain jurisdictional advantages and stronger positions in relocation and Hague proceedings. Parents who delay, or whose descent chains fall outside the new limits, face the risk of losing access to Italian courts and the protections those courts provide.

For families navigating these changes, the recommended priorities are clear: register without delay, secure travel documents with both parents’ consent, preserve evidence of the child’s habitual residence, and obtain specialist legal advice before taking any unilateral action. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides access to qualified family‑law practitioners across Italy, and the detailed analysis of Italy’s 2026 citizenship changes offers further background. For urgent Hague or enforcement matters, the GLE’s recent coverage of international child abduction procedures in Italy provides supplementary procedural guidance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alessandro Gravante at Giambrone & Partners International Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Gazzetta Ufficiale (Italian Official Journal)
  2. Ministero della Giustizia, Sottrazione Internazionale di Minore
  3. HCCH, Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction
  4. Corte Costituzionale (Italian Constitutional Court)
  5. European e‑Justice Portal, Cross‑Border Placement of a Child
  6. Mondaq, Cross‑Border Divorce and Child Custody in Italy
  7. Global Law Experts, Italy Citizenship Changes 2026 (Family)
  8. Ministry of Interior (Anagrafe / Citizenship Guidance)

FAQs

Q1: What is the new citizenship law in Italy for 2026?
Italy’s 2026 Budget Law tightened the rules on citizenship by descent (iure sanguinis), imposing generational limits and stricter consular registration deadlines for minors born abroad. The full text is published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale, and the Ministry of Interior is issuing administrative circulars to guide implementation.
No. Italy continues to permit dual citizenship. The 2026 reforms do not prohibit holding Italian nationality alongside another country’s citizenship. However, the narrower descent rules mean that fewer individuals may qualify for Italian citizenship in the first place, which can indirectly affect dual‑citizenship status for some families.
The child must be registered at the Italian consulate within the deadline set by the 2026 Budget Law. If the parent’s own citizenship was acquired through a long generational chain, the child may no longer qualify automatically. Prompt registration and documentary preparation are essential.
Not lawfully. Under Italian law, both parents exercising parental responsibility must consent to a minor’s international travel. Removing a child without consent can constitute wrongful removal under the Hague Convention and may trigger criminal sanctions under Italy’s revised family‑law provisions.
Contact the Italian Central Authority (Ministry of Justice) immediately to initiate Hague Convention return proceedings. Simultaneously, apply to the juvenile court for interim protective measures. Gather all evidence of the child’s habitual residence, your custody rights, and the circumstances of the removal.
If the child is an Italian citizen, Italian courts may scrutinise foreign custody orders more closely under the public‑policy (ordine pubblico) exception, particularly regarding whether the order preserves the child’s connection to Italy. Citizenship status can therefore influence the speed and outcome of recognition proceedings.
File immediately if there is an imminent risk of the child’s removal from Italy, if a passport has been issued without your consent, or if the other parent has announced an intention to relocate permanently. The juvenile court can issue protective orders, including travel bans and document seizure, within days. Bring certified copies of the child’s birth certificate, existing custody orders, evidence of habitual residence, and any communications evidencing the threat.

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How Italy's 2026 Citizenship Changes Affect Cross‑border Child Custody, Relocation and Hague Cases

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