How to renounce Nepali citizenship
Who you file with (choose one):
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Abroad: the nearest Embassy/Consulate of Nepal (they forward your file to the Ministry of Home Affairs, Nepal).
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In Nepal: the District Administration Office (DAO/CDO) that issued your citizenship.
What to prepare (typical set):
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Filled “Relinquishment of Nepali Citizenship” application (mission/DAO form).
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Original Nepali Citizenship Certificate (this is surrendered).
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Two passport-size photos.
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Proof of your new/foreign citizenship (e.g., naturalization certificate + foreign passport0
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Any Nepali passport you still hold (to be cancelled).
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Prescribed fee (example: USD 50 at the DC Embassy; varies by mission).
Step-by-step:
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Submit the application + originals at the Embassy/Consulate or DAO. The mission/DAO verifies your details and forwards the file to Nepal’s Ministry of Home Affairs (MoHA)
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Processing happens in Nepal (MoHA). Missions note updates by email/SMS; recent postings indicate around 3–4 months is common, though it can vary.
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Decision & certificate: once approved, you receive an official Renunciation/Relinquishment Certificate/letter; your Nepali citizenship record is cancelled.
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Aftercare: do not use any Nepali passport/ID going forward; return/cancel any such documents as instructed by the mission/DAO. (Missions require the original certificate for cancellation.)
India-specific filing note (if you are in India): the Embassy of Nepal in New Delhi asks applicants to bring the original Nepali citizenship for verification with the issuing DAO before processing.
“NRN status” — two different things
Nepal has two separate “NRN” pathways. It’s crucial to know which you mean:
A) NRN Citizenship (a limited form of citizenship created by the 2022/2023 amendments)
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Who qualifies: Foreign citizens of Nepali origin who hold citizenship of a non-SAARC country. (Must prove a parent/grandparent was a Nepali citizen. Former Nepali citizens must show proof of renunciation.)
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What you get: economic, social, cultural rights in Nepal (no political/public-office rights). You take an oath and receive an NRN citizenship certificate.
B) NRN ID Card (the traditional “NRN Card”)
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Who qualifies: foreign citizens of Nepali origin and certain Nepali residents abroad—again, excluding SAARC-country citizens.
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What you get: practical benefits like gratis NRN visa on arrival and facilitation for investment/banking; it is not citizenship.
Important SAARC caveat: If the new citizenship is of a SAARC country (e.g., India), current rules do not allow NRN citizenship or the standard NRN ID Card. The 2023 regulations require the foreign citizenship to be non-SAARC.
How to apply for NRN Citizenship (if eligible — i.e., non-SAARC)
Where to file:
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The DAO (Chief District Officer) where your (or your ancestor’s) citizenship was issued, or a Nepali Embassy/Consulate abroad.
What to prepare (per 2023 Regulations):
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Proof a parent/grandparent was a Nepali citizen (their citizenship copy, recommendation, etc.)
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If you ever held Nepali citizenship: your Renunciation Certificate.
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Your foreign citizenship proof and current foreign passport.
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Proof of residence in a non-SAARC country.
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A signed commitment to abide by Nepal’s Constitution and laws
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A relative or Nepali citizen who can identify you during verification at the DAO/mission (as required).
Step-by-step:
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File the application with all documents at the DAO or mission.
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Identity verification: a relative/identifier appears before the CDO/authorized officer.
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Oath: you take an oath of loyalty to the Constitution and prevailing laws (as an NRN citizen).
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Decision & issuance: upon approval, you’re issued the NRN Citizenship Certificate in the prescribed Annexure A format. Electronic submission is also permitted when enabled by MoHA.
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Rights & limits reminder: NRN citizenship excludes political rights (no voting/office). It enables economic/social/cultural rights
Property limits (typical ceilings for foreign citizens of Nepali origin):
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Up to 2 ropani in Kathmandu Valley;
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Up to 8 kattha in Terai municipalities;
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Up to 4 ropani in other municipalities;
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Up to 1 bigha in Terai rural areas;
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Up to 10 ropani elsewhere.
How to apply for the NRN ID Card (if eligible — i.e., non-SAARC)
Where to apply:
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Through the NRNA channel/Embassy per local instructions; missions list the document checklist and fees.
Typical documents:
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Application form (NRN Bylaws 2009).
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Proof of Nepali origin (parents’/grandparents’ Nepali citizenship).
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Your foreign passport; if you’re a former Nepali, attach the Nepali renunciation letter.
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Employment/business proof in the resident country; photos; fee.
Benefit you actually use at the border:
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With a valid NRN Card, you can obtain a gratis NRN visa on arrival in Nepal for a pre-set duration.
Quick decision tree
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Step 1: Renounce Nepali citizenship (as above).
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Step 2:
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If your new citizenship is from a non-SAARC country → you may apply for NRN Citizenship or the NRN ID Card (or both, depending on your needs).
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If your new citizenship is from a SAARC country (e.g., India) → NRN Citizenship/ID Card are not available under current rules. Plan for regular visas/other options instead.
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Sources you can show at the counter or attach
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Embassy of Nepal (Washington DC) Renunciation checklist, fee and mailing instructions.
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Consulate/Embassy notice on processing timelines (3–4 months typical).
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Nepal Citizenship (Third Amendment) Regulations, 2080 (2023) – establishes NRN citizenship procedures, non-SAARC eligibility, oath, DAO/mission filing, and document list.
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NRN Card visa benefit (Department of Immigration).
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Property ceilings for foreign citizens of Nepali origin (Non-Resident Nepali Rules, 2066).
