Does a Criminal Record Block Naturalization? The Actual Section 12a StAG Thresholds
Not every conviction blocks naturalization, Section 12a StAG sets specific thresholds for what gets disregarded entirely. Fines up to 90 Tagessätze (daily rates) and suspended prison sentences up to 3 months that were later remitted are ignored outright, and youth-law educational or corrective measures don't count against you at all. Multiple convictions get added together for this calculation, and authorities can still exercise discretion to overlook a conviction that exceeds the threshold by up to 21 additional Tagessätze or 3 weeks if your overall integration and social prognosis are otherwise favorable. There's one hard line with no tolerance at all: convictions with an established antisemitic, racist, or otherwise dehumanizing motivation are never disregarded, regardless of how small the sentence was. Foreign convictions count only if the underlying act would also be punishable under German law and the foreign proceeding met rule-of-law standards, and any naturalization decision is put on hold entirely while a criminal investigation or prosecution against you is still open. Every application also requires a current extended Führungszeugnis, a certificate of good conduct, no older than 3 months.
The Official Rule
A past brush with the law doesn’t automatically end a naturalization application, German law builds specific, numeric thresholds into exactly what counts against you and what doesn’t, and the actual rule is considerably more forgiving than most applicants assume going in.
Section 12a StAG sets out what gets disregarded entirely. Three categories don’t count against naturalization at all: youth-law educational or corrective measures, fines up to 90 Tagessätze (daily rates, Germany’s standard way of sizing a fine to income), and suspended prison sentences up to 3 months that were later remitted. If your record consists only of something in these categories, it simply doesn’t factor into the decision.
Multiple convictions get aggregated, rather than assessed one at a time, unless a court already combined them into a single lower sentence itself. When a fine and a prison sentence need to be added together for this calculation, the statute treats 1 Tagessatz as equal to 1 day of imprisonment.
There’s discretionary room above the hard threshold. migrando.de’s explainer on the Bagatellgrenze describes how authorities can still choose to disregard a conviction that exceeds the 90-Tagessätze or 3-month line by up to an additional 21 Tagessätze or 3 weeks, provided the applicant’s overall social prognosis is favorable, integration is otherwise solid, and there are no other pending proceedings. This tolerance mechanism is consistent with the statute’s structure, not a separate informal practice.
One category has zero tolerance, at any sentence size. Convictions with an established antisemitic, racist, or otherwise dehumanizing (menschenverachtend) motivation are never disregarded under Section 12a StAG, this exception overrides every other threshold in the statute.
| Category | Treatment |
|---|---|
| Youth-law educational/corrective measures | Never counted against naturalization |
| Fine up to 90 Tagessätze | Disregarded entirely |
| Suspended sentence up to 3 months, later remitted | Disregarded entirely |
| Up to 21 additional Tagessätze / 3 weeks over the threshold | May still be disregarded at the authority's discretion |
| Antisemitic, racist, or dehumanizing-motivated conviction | Never disregarded, any sentence size |
Foreign convictions are handled separately, under Section 12a Abs. 2 StAG. They count only if the underlying act would also be punishable under German law, the foreign proceeding met rule-of-law standards, and the sentence was proportionate. A foreign conviction that would already be subject to deletion under Germany’s own Bundeszentralregistergesetz (BZRG) can’t be counted at all. And if a criminal investigation or prosecution against you is still open anywhere, your naturalization decision is put on hold until that concludes, under Section 12a Abs. 3 StAG.
Every application requires a current extended Führungszeugnis, a certificate of good conduct, no older than 3 months, obtainable through your local Meldebehörde, including online. migrando.de’s guide on Straffreiheit bei der Einbürgerung notes that entries which must be deleted under the BZRG, such as fines up to 90 Tagessätze typically expiring after 5 years absent further offenses under Section 46 BZRG, no longer appear on this certificate at all, so they’re not something you need to disclose or explain.

What Real People Say
Legal explainers written specifically for this question, migrando.de’s guides among them, consistently push back against the assumption that any criminal record automatically ends a naturalization application. The framing that comes through is that the statute was deliberately built with a genuine de minimis threshold rather than a zero-tolerance rule, precisely because lawmakers recognized that a single old, minor fine shouldn’t permanently bar someone who has otherwise integrated.
Where the guidance gets more cautious is around the discretionary tolerance zone just above the hard 90-Tagessätze line, since that’s a judgment call by the authority rather than an automatic entitlement, applicants in that gray zone are consistently advised to be ready to demonstrate a genuinely favorable overall picture, not just point to the specific numbers.
Step by Step
- Request your own extended Führungszeugnis early through your Meldebehörde, keep it current, it can’t be older than 3 months when you apply.
- Add up any fines or suspended sentences you have to see whether they fall within the 90-Tagessätze or 3-month disregarded categories, remembering multiple convictions are combined.
- If you’re somewhat above that threshold, focus on building a clearly favorable overall integration picture, since discretionary tolerance up to 21 additional Tagessätze exists but isn’t automatic.
- If you have a foreign conviction, check whether the underlying act is even punishable under German law and whether it would already be expunged under BZRG rules if it had happened in Germany.
- If any criminal investigation or prosecution against you is still open, expect your naturalization decision to wait until it’s fully resolved.
- Don’t assume a specific figure applies to your case without checking, thresholds and discretion both hinge on details specific to your record.
Compliance Note
This page explains the general legal framework for how a criminal record affects naturalization eligibility under Section 12a StAG, current as of mid-2026. It is not legal advice, and how these thresholds apply to your specific record depends on individual circumstances the authority will assess directly. Consult an immigration lawyer or your Einbürgerungsbehörde if you have any conviction on your record before applying.
FAQ & Common Pitfalls
I got a small fine years ago. Does that automatically disqualify me from naturalization?
Not automatically, no. Section 12a StAG disregards fines up to 90 Tagessätze entirely, and even convictions somewhat above that threshold, up to an additional 21 Tagessätze, can still be overlooked at the authority's discretion if your broader integration and social prognosis are favorable and you have no other pending proceedings. If your fine was genuinely minor, it's very possibly within the range that simply doesn't count against you.
How does the calculation work if I have more than one conviction?
Multiple convictions get added together toward the 90-Tagessätze threshold, rather than each being evaluated separately, unless a court itself already imposed a single combined sentence lower than the sum of the individual ones. If you're combining a fine with a prison sentence in this calculation, the law treats 1 Tagessatz as equivalent to 1 day of imprisonment for the purpose of adding them up.
Is there any conviction that's disqualifying no matter how small the sentence was?
Yes, and this is the one place the law draws a completely hard line with no tolerance built in. Convictions with an established antisemitic, racist, or otherwise dehumanizing motivation are never disregarded under Section 12a StAG, regardless of how minor the sentence itself was. Every other threshold in the statute allows for some flexibility, this one doesn't.
I have a conviction from my home country, not Germany. Does that count?
It can, but only under specific conditions. Section 12a Abs. 2 StAG requires the underlying act to also be punishable under German law, the foreign proceeding to have met rule-of-law standards, and the sentence to be proportionate. A foreign conviction that would already be subject to deletion under Germany's own Bundeszentralregistergesetz (BZRG) can't be held against you at all, so an old, minor foreign conviction is treated similarly to how an old, minor German one would be.