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Children born before BC. Parents naturalised.secret.simon wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 4:55 amWas the child born before or after you became a British citizen? How did you become a British citizen (naturalisation, descent, etc)?
As previously mentioned, both parents have been granted British citizenship through naturalization. Children were born abroad previous to our naturalization and have been living in the UK for only 4 years as EU citizens. I am stuck on the residency question as I have been trying to fill the application form online for their settled status but on the residency part when I tick the box that my children have a sponsor a question comes up asking for the sponsor application reference number. However, as UK citizens neither my husband nor I, are eligible to apply for the scheme. I am not sure if I can use the reference number when he got his Permanent residence before becoming British. I have read the guidance notes and it says that a family member of a British citizen, who also has EU, EEA or Swiss citizenship and who lived in the UK as an EU, EEA or Swiss citizen before getting British citizenship, can apply for the settled status and also in case of Irish nationals their child can get the same status that they could get, based on how long they’ve lived in the UK. However, it does not say specifically in the case of children with parents with dual EU/UK citizenship. What should I do in their case?secret.simon wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 4:55 amWas the child born before or after you became a British citizen? How did you become a British citizen (naturalisation, descent, etc)?
Thanks for your input. I was prepared to do what you did. However, when I saw the guidance note and realized that Irish citizen's children can inherit their parent's status so I thought that perhaps the same would apply to children of dual national parents. It would be better if my children could inherit our status because instead of pre-settled status they could be granted the settled status, saving us the hassle of applying again for settled staus next year when they complete 5 years of residency.Romy88 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 12:00 pmHi
I applied for my both children on their behalf. My daughter already got COA.
I think you should apply under their own residency. But in a box if they apply with someone's help just tick "family member" and provide your phone number and email. You will get email confirmation about submission of application with your contact details.
Unfortunately, there seems to be no provision in your case.Angie77 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 31, 2019 1:51 pmHowever, when I saw the guidance note and realized that Irish citizen's children can inherit their parent's status so I thought that perhaps the same would apply to children of dual national parents. It would be better if my children could inherit our status because instead of pre-settled status they could be granted the settled status, saving us the hassle of applying again for settled staus next year when they complete 5 years of residency.
This earlier grant of settled status for children is purely a matter of British law, so Lounes does not apply; your children are restricted to the qualifying times one would expect under EU law; they must reside for the full 5 years (i.e. one more year) to gain settled status under Condition 3.Immigration Rule EU 11 Condition 7 wrote: (a) The applicant is a child under the age of 21 years of a relevant EU citizen, or...
and
(b) The relevant EU citizen (or, as the case may be, their spouse or civil partner) has been or is being granted indefinite leave to remain under this Appendix (or, in the case of an Irish citizen who has not made a valid application under this Appendix, they would be granted that leave if they made such an application)