News Briefing

What a Second Passport Can and Cannot Do About Military Conscription

Jun 9, 2026News Briefingwww.artoncapital.com
What a Second Passport Can and Cannot Do About Military Conscription

Second citizenship rarely eliminates military obligations but can provide strategic options for globally mobile families.

• Military conscription continues in countries such as South Korea, Israel, Greece, Türkiye, Russia, Latvia, Croatia, and Germany, applying to citizens regardless of residence. • A second passport does not override legal obligations tied to another citizenship; obligations follow citizenship, not residence. • Second citizenship can enable relocation strategies, long-term residency in another country, and eligibility to renounce the original citizenship if desired. • Timing is critical: conscription systems usually trigger obligations around ages 18–20, so planning must start years in advance to establish residence and create legal pathways. • Renunciation carries broader legal, economic, and inheritance consequences; alternative strategies often involve maintaining compliance abroad to allow obligations to expire naturally.

Takeaway: Families seeking to mitigate conscription risks should view a second passport as a tool within a broader long-term mobility and residency strategy, rather than a direct exemption from military service.

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