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## Summary
The option procedure (*optieprocedure*) under Article 6 of the Rijkswet op het Nederlanderschap (RWN) is a declaration-based path to Dutch citizenship that sits between the automatic descent route of Article 3 and the full naturalization process of Article 8. For families of Dutch ancestry living abroad, two specific option-procedure scenarios matter:
1. The pre-1985 maternal-line fix (Article 6(1), latentes procedure). Under RWN as it stood before 1 January 1985, Dutch citizenship passed only through the father. Children born before 1985 to a Dutch mother and a non-Dutch father generally did not inherit Dutch citizenship. The 2010 RWN amendment created a retroactive declaration procedure: the affected children — and, under certain conditions, their own children — can opt to become Dutch by filing a declaration at a Dutch embassy. **No Dutch residency is required** for this specific remedy. This is the single most useful option-procedure route for families abroad whose Dutch line runs through a pre-1985 Dutch mother.
2. Recovery of lost citizenship (Article 6(1)(f), (g)). A former Dutch citizen who lost citizenship through the age-28 rule (1985–2003), the 10-year rule (2003–2022), the 13-year rule (2022–), or through foreign naturalization before 1 April 2023, can recover Dutch citizenship by declaration — but generally only after establishing at least 1 year of Dutch residence with a permanent residence permit, or (for certain cases) 10 years of Dutch residence at some point in life. For most applicants living abroad, this means moving to the Netherlands before filing.
Why the option procedure is attractive when it applies:
- Lighter than naturalization — fewer requirements for people who fit one of the option categories
- Cheaper — lower filing fees
- Does not always require renunciation of prior citizenship (though the Dutch government has historically taken a strict line on dual nationality for naturalization; option procedure has more carve-outs)
- Some variants (the maternal-line fix) require no Dutch residency
Why this route is narrow:
- The maternal-line fix only applies if your Dutch-mother ancestor had her child **before 1985**
- Recovery routes (except the maternal fix) generally require Dutch residency to file
- Not every lost-citizenship case qualifies for option recovery — some fall to full naturalization
Once completed, the applicant is an EU and Schengen citizen.
## Eligibility
- A Dutch ancestor through whom a specific Article 6 option-procedure category applies
- For the maternal-line fix: your line must run through a Dutch mother whose child was born before 1985 and was blocked from citizenship by the pre-1985 paternal-line-only rule
- For citizenship recovery: you must be a former Dutch citizen who lost it under one of the automatic-loss rules, AND you typically need Dutch residency to file
- Apostilled and officially translated records showing the chain and the specific triggering event
- No Dutch-language test for the maternal-line fix; basic Dutch language for some recovery routes
- Dual citizenship is permitted in most option-procedure cases (unlike ordinary naturalization)
## What This Route Allows
This route can help confirm or document citizenship in the Netherlands if the legal requirements are met. For many people in this category, the main work is proving the facts with reliable civil, family, and citizenship records.
## What This Route Is Not
This is not a shortcut around documentation. Even when the citizenship claim is based on a right, you still need records that prove each required fact and family link.
## Next Steps
1. Identify which Article 6 category applies to you:
- Pre-1985 Dutch-mother line with a child blocked by the paternal-line rule → 2010 retroactive fix
- Former Dutch citizen who lost citizenship under the 10/13/28-year or naturalization rules → residency-based recovery
- Other specific Article 6 categories (spouse of Dutch citizen, former Dutch resident, etc.)
2. For the maternal-line fix — gather the Dutch mother's birth record, her marriage record, the next-generation child's birth record, and civil records for every generation down to you
3. For recovery cases — assess whether you can establish Dutch residency, or whether the case may actually fall under a different Article 6 variant (some cases qualify without residency depending on the specific loss mechanism)
4. Research Dutch records — WieWasWie (wiewaswie.nl), municipal archives, Centraal Bureau voor Genealogie
5. Gather vital records from your country of residence — certified long-form birth, marriage, and death certificates for every generation
6. Apostille each civil record under the 1961 Hague Convention (or use your country's legalization procedure)
7. Obtain certified Dutch translations from a sworn translator (*beëdigd vertaler*)
8. File the option declaration at the Dutch embassy or consulate (for the maternal-line fix, which has no residency requirement) or at the gemeente (municipality) in the Netherlands for residency-based recovery
9. Track the declaration and respond promptly to any request for missing documents
10. Once granted, apply for a Dutch passport and register for a BSN
## Sources
- [Rijkswet op het Nederlanderschap — full text (Overheid.nl)](https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0003738/)
- [IND — Becoming a Dutch national through option](https://ind.nl/en/dutch-citizenship/becoming-a-dutch-national-through-option)
- [Netherlands Worldwide — Dutch nationality](https://www.netherlandsworldwide.nl/dutch-nationality)
- [Government.nl — Dutch citizenship overview](https://www.government.nl/topics/dutch-citizenship)
- [Embassy of the Netherlands in Washington, D.C.](https://www.netherlandsandyou.nl/your-country-and-the-netherlands/united-states)
- [Apostille Convention (HCCH) — U.S. competent authorities](https://www.hcch.net/en/instruments/conventions/authorities1/?cid=41)
The Dutch option procedure is a declaration-based route — faster and cheaper than naturalization — for specific groups defined by law. This pathway focuses on the 2010 latent-Dutch route that can repair pre-1985 maternal-line chains without requiring Dutch residence.