I am Indian and I am preparing to naturalize as a US citizen. I have heard that the US allows dual citizenship but India does not. Will I automatically lose my Indian citizenship? What does this mean practically for me?
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The United States does not formally recognize or prohibit dual nationality — it is a policy of tolerance. The US oath of naturalization does include a clause renouncing allegiance to other nations, but US courts and the State Department have held this does not prevent other countries from continuing to recognize you as a citizen. India, however, does not permit dual citizenship. The Citizenship Act of 1955 provides that Indian citizenship is automatically terminated upon voluntary acquisition of citizenship of another country. Therefore, when you naturalize as a US citizen, you simultaneously lose Indian citizenship by operation of Indian law. This is not optional or waivable — it is automatic under Indian statute.
I naturalized in 2019 and the loss of Indian citizenship was genuinely emotional, not just logistical. Practically, I surrendered my Indian passport, got my Indian passport cancelled at the Indian consulate, and applied for an OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) card. OCI is not citizenship — it is a lifetime visa equivalent that allows visa-free travel to India for most purposes, work rights, business ownership rights, and several other benefits. I cannot vote in Indian elections or own agricultural land, but for my day-to-day life, OCI serves me extremely well. The OCI application after naturalization should be filed immediately — there is no deadline but life is simpler once it is done.
Post-naturalization steps for Indian nationals:
Important: Do not travel to India on your old Indian passport after naturalizing as a US citizen — that passport is no longer valid and using it creates legal complications.
The OCI vs Indian citizenship distinction matters more than most people realize. OCI holders cannot: vote in Indian elections, hold certain government positions, purchase agricultural land, or be employed in certain sensitive government roles. For those with business interests in Indian agriculture or political aspirations, these restrictions are real. However, the 2019 amendment merging PIO card with OCI and expanding OCI rights has made OCI substantially more functional than it was before. Some Indian immigrants choose to delay US naturalization precisely to protect their Indian citizenship for specific purposes. It is a deeply personal decision that involves weighing career goals, family ties, property interests, emotional identity, and immigration security — no single answer is right for everyone.