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EEA section 2.4 & 2.5

Posted: Tue Aug 12, 2014 8:36 pm
by timovega
Hi, I'm trying to fill my AN application but I stuck at one point.

In section 2.4 they are asking you to state on what basis you were in the UK
for over last 8 year I have been working for the same company. However there was a year when I had my own business as well as FT job. Should I list self-employment as well as my FT job or not? I have also study PT. Do I have to list it?

In section 2.5 if you exercised Treaty right in employment.
Do I have to fill it? I'm Polish and I was registered on WRS. So confused :/

My WRS contains old address of the company that I'm working for. Should I phone them and update the records or not?

Re: EEA section 2.4 & 2.5

Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2014 7:42 pm
by bonio_j
From what I read You have been "EU worker" for past 8 years, and this is what you should add to
the table, just split the the time and register all details in there i.e:

i would add something like that:
06-14 - EU worker - Employed full time (also owned a business between 08 and 09 on top of FT employment)

Under 2.5 as far as I remember you should have space to list all employers if you had many along
the time.

Since you have been working continuously I would restrain from putting PT studies up there since
you were exercising treaty rights based on employment in the first place, and adding studies might
lead case worker to confusion. Note there are extra requirements if you just study w/o being
employed (like private insurance), this is not the case with you but it might lead to misunderstanding,
so my advice is, skip it.

Note WRS registration date is extremely important, so you have to prove registration and residence
for 6 years (after 5 years you should gain ILR even w/o application) before you can apply for naturalisation.

Re: EEA section 2.4 & 2.5

Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2014 7:08 pm
by timovega
Thank you Bonio, could you please explain "after 5 years you should gain ILR even w/o application" as I do not understand?

Re: EEA section 2.4 & 2.5

Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2014 7:38 pm
by bonio_j
You can apply after 5 years (since WRS registration - assuming you have been working, studying, etc.) for permanent residency status - so called ILR - if you want to, having ILR status for 12 month you can apply for citizenship. You can also apply directly for naturalisation after 6 years (w/o applying for ILR first) b/s as a EU citizen you gained ILR after 5 years residency in UK even w/o applying.

sse here - chapter 6:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... let-an.pdf
New immigration regulations came into force on 30 April 2006. If you are a national of a country which is a member state of the EEA or Switzerland, or the family member of such a person, you will automatically have permanent residence status after exercising EEA free movement rights in the UK for any continuous period of 5 years ending on or after 30 April
2006, and therefore will not have to apply for indefinite leave to remain. But remember that, unless married to or the civil partner of a British citizen, you should normally have held permanent resident status for 12 months before applying for naturalisation. This means that you may need to wait until you have been in the United Kingdom for 6 years before you can apply
I hope this is clear.

Re: EEA section 2.4 & 2.5

Posted: Thu Aug 28, 2014 10:11 pm
by badratio
bonio_j wrote:You can apply after 5 years (since WRS registration - assuming you have been working, studying, etc.) for permanent residency status - so called ILR - if you want to, having ILR status for 12 month you can apply for citizenship. You can also apply directly for naturalisation after 6 years (w/o applying for ILR first) b/s as a EU citizen you gained ILR after 5 years residency in UK even w/o applying.

sse here - chapter 6:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... let-an.pdf
New immigration regulations came into force on 30 April 2006. If you are a national of a country which is a member state of the EEA or Switzerland, or the family member of such a person, you will automatically have permanent residence status after exercising EEA free movement rights in the UK for any continuous period of 5 years ending on or after 30 April
2006, and therefore will not have to apply for indefinite leave to remain. But remember that, unless married to or the civil partner of a British citizen, you should normally have held permanent resident status for 12 months before applying for naturalisation. This means that you may need to wait until you have been in the United Kingdom for 6 years before you can apply
I hope this is clear.
It's actually called Permanent Residency for EU nationals and ILR for non-EU.