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I emphasise that all those figures relate to average waiting times. Clearly some people hear a lot quicker than those average lengths of time ... others wait longer.These are the waiting times as of end of January.
Naturalisation 3.98 months
Adult registrations 1.71 months
Registration of minors 3.56 months
Registration of stateless 5.95 months
Other registrations 3.31 months
Renunciations 1.57 months
Right of Abode applications 2.86 months
Average times for all nationality applications (as of end of January) 3.81 months
The short increase of waiting times for ALL Nationality applications is due to a large influx of Naturalisation applications received prior to 1st November 2005.
Applications for Citizenship
We received a very high number of citizenship applications during October 2005. We will be processing these as quickly as possible but applicants may experience slightly longer delays than usual while we cope with this very high demand.
All applications have been entered onto our systems and acknowledgement letter have been sent. If you have not yet received an acknowledgement of your application you can contact us on...0845 010 5200. You will need to provide us with your personal details - name, address, date of birth, H.O. reference number, if available - and also date of application if possible and any RD/Special Delivery number relating to the application (if appropriate).
Once you have received an acknowledgement you can be reassured that your application will be dealt with as soon as we can. Please bear with us, we received more than four months' work in a matter of days. We do have a number of experienced teams processing applications and some people will already have received theirs back. Our previous performance was that 56% of applications were completed in 3 months and 96% in 6 months. We estimate we will be able to complete all applications received in October 05 by June 06......
....Please contact Nationality Group in urgent cases only. A lot of enquiries can slow down decision times.
If you wish to apply for British citizenship and you plan to travel abroad within 12 weeks of making an application, you should not send in original passports or travel documents with your application. You may send in copies of documents certified by a solicitor. Each page of a passport must be copied.
I honestly don't know, rogerroger: the link provided by shankarindian seems pretty unambiguous, and the last time I speculated that a person in the passport-issuing chain might possibly betray human characteristics by exercising flexibility and judgement, I got attacked behaving in such an irresponsible manner. In your position, I'd try it, if I was in a hurry for the passport. But it does seem to me that UKPS are likely to be a bit less busy at this time of year - Easter is not until mid-April - so do you actually need the little bit of priority that the check and send service offers? The lack of birth certificate seems unlikely to cause a problem with a direct postal application to UKPS...rogerroger wrote:oh i did not know that one has to produce the birth certificate. i am nto even sure if i have it on me.
ppron do you think the post office people will accept the argument that we were born outside the uk and just become nationals, and the citizenship certificate from the home office is the proof,
if we do have to show the certificate, is it returned by the postoffice there and then.
I haven't got a passport application handy (and won't, until 2011!) but does it matter if the countersignature goes outside the box? I countersigned someone's driving licence application today, and it was only the applicant who had to be careful about keeping in the box, because that signature gets scanned onto the the driving licence. If your friend has invalidated your application and you can't get him to sign a fresh form for some reason, I think it is important that you stick rigidly to the list of qualified counter-sigs provided by UKPS - that's one point where the UKPS are less likely to exercise discretion, in these identity theft-conscious days, IMO....rogerroger wrote:i had a question abotu the counter signatory, can i get my landlord to sign, though he is self employed. i got my friend to sign it, however he went outside the box a bit and i think the appilcation is now invalid. unfortunately i just had the one form
the application does sayI honestly don't know, rogerroger: the link provided by shankarindian seems pretty unambiguous, and the last time I speculated that a person in the passport-issuing chain might possibly betray human characteristics by exercising flexibility and judgement, I got attacked behaving in such an irresponsible manner.
What is the occupation of this person? The fact that he/she is self-employed is irrelevant ... what do they do for a living? Not everyone is entitled to countersign a passport application form. How long have you known that person?i had a question abotu the counter signatory, can i get my landlord to sign, though he is self employed.
If he/she doesn't meet the criteria, you'll need to ask the UKPS whether they'll make an exception.Accountant; Articled clerk of a limited company; Assurance agent of recognised company; Bank/building society official; Barrister; Broker; Chairman/director of limited company; Chemist; Chiropodist; Christian Science practitioner; Commissioner of oaths; Councillor: local or county; Civil servant (permanent); Dentist; Engineer (with professional qualifications); Fire service official; Funeral director; Insurance agent (full time) of a recognised company; Journalist; Justice of the Peace; Legal secretary (members and fellows of the Institute of legal secretaries); Local government officer; Manager/Personnel officer (of limited company); Member of Parliament; Merchant Navy officer; Minister of a recognised religion; Nurse (SRN and SEN); Officer of the armed services (active or retired); Optician; Person with honours (e.g. OBE MBE etc.); Photographer (professional); Police officer; Post Office official; President/Secretary of a recognised organisation; Salvation Army officer; Social worker; Solicitor; Surveyor; Teacher, lecturer; Trade union officer; Travel agency (qualified); Valuers and auctioneers (fellow and associate members of the incorporated society); Warrant officers and Chief Petty Officers.
I can assure you from personal experience that birth certificates etc. are NOT needed for passport applications by postal check and send for naturalised citizens. The naturalisation certificate and the foreign passport are enough.shankarindian wrote:I saw from an old posting from bbdivo that passport applications submitted through Post-and-Check at post office ask for birth certificate in all cases. UK Passport Agency website does not mention the requirement for birth certificate.
Why then does post office ask for birth certificate?
Post office check-and-send web site is at
http://www.postoffice.co.uk/portal/po/c ... d=19100197