Free Telegram channel

Learn German with photo-based word cards

Short visual vocabulary posts, quick quizzes, and daily repetition. Join the free channel on Telegram.

View All Cities
Bayern

Regensburg Citizenship Processing Time (2026 Update)

If you live in the state of Bayern and have applied for German citizenship in Regensburg, you probably want to know how long the process takes. We are currently collecting community data for Regensburg.

Applying for naturalization (Einbürgerung) in Regensburg involves gathering the right documents, taking the citizenship test (Einbürgerungstest), and proving your language proficiency. The wait times can vary significantly based on your specific case and the current workload at the local immigration office. Once we have enough data from applicants in Regensburg, we will display the real average wait times here. You can help by sharing your own timeline if you have already applied!

Advertisement

Open Interactive Map & Submissions

Want to see detailed case timelines, filter by application type, read helpful tips, or submit your own citizenship processing timeline? Visit our central interactive tool.

Open Interactive Map & Submissions

Nearby Cities in Bayern

Check out citizenship processing times and reports from other major cities in the same state.

Live Statistics

Total Reports
0
Advertisement

FAQ

Quick, practical answers about how the timeline works, what the numbers mean, and how to contribute.

Where does the data come from?
The numbers come from anonymized, community-submitted timelines. Each entry is a real user report, so results can vary by case and over time.
What does “Average (Approved)” mean?
It’s the average processing time of approved applications only. This avoids mixing in ongoing (“pending”) cases when comparing cities.
How do you calculate time for “pending” applications?
If someone selected “pending”, we count days from the application submission date up to today. If the submission date is missing, we can’t compute it.
Fastest / slowest cities: how is that decided?
We sort cities by their “Average (Approved)” when enough approved entries exist. Small sample sizes can be noisy, so treat rankings as directional.
What is the “route” (Standard / Marriage / Special)?
Route indicates the basis of eligibility (e.g. standard 5 years, marriage 3 years). Different routes can have different timelines, so we show breakdowns.
Berlin has “Referat”. What is that?
Berlin processes cases by internal units (“Referat”, often S1–S6). If your letter or emails mention a unit, selecting it helps make the Berlin stats more accurate.
Is my submission private?
Yes. Submissions are anonymous and only include what you enter. Don’t share names, case numbers, or sensitive documents in the notes.
Is this official legal advice?
No. Citizify is a community tracker, not a government source. Use it as a reference, and confirm details with official channels for your case.