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Do you mean the rule for ilr for the parent of a child who has been here for 7 years? If so, it's the parent who get Leave to remain for an extra 3 years then applies for ilr after 10 years.benneviss wrote:Hi Guys ,
As you know this rule is now back from 9th July 2012 .
I have specific query ;
I am eligible to apply for ILR in April 2014 . My child will finish 7 years in June 2013 .
My question is , can my child apply for ILR in June 2013 or not ?
Should I take extension in June 2013 with my child ? I might not be able to make it in April 2014 on the income threshold ?
Do you mean the rule for ilr for the parent of a child who has been here for 7 years? If so, it's the parent who get Leave to remain for an extra 3 years then applies for ilr after 10 years.[/quote]benneviss wrote:Hi Guys ,
As you know this rule is now back from 9th July 2012 .
I have specific query ;
I am eligible to apply for ILR in April 2014 . My child will finish 7 years in June 2013 .
My question is , can my child apply for ILR in June 2013 or not ?
Should I take extension in June 2013 with my child ? I might not be able to make it in April 2014 on the income threshold ?
[/quote]benneviss wrote:Thanks for your prompt reply .
That means my child can not have ILR before I get , but child will have an extension of visa along with me , is that correct ?
quote="D4109125"]Do you mean the rule for ilr for the parent of a child who has been here for 7 years? If so, it's the parent who get Leave to remain for an extra 3 years then applies for ilr after 10 years.benneviss wrote:Hi Guys ,
As you know this rule is now back from 9th July 2012 .
I have specific query ;
I am eligible to apply for ILR in April 2014 . My child will finish 7 years in June 2013 .
My question is , can my child apply for ILR in June 2013 or not ?
Should I take extension in June 2013 with my child ? I might not be able to make it in April 2014 on the income threshold ?
Yes if you apply for flr under the 7 year rule you'd both be given 2.5 year extensions then after that you could apply for ilr. There is some criteria I.e. would be unreasonable to expect child to return etc as I'm sure it would. Though if you can get ilr in another way it might be quicker? The child must have also lives here continuously and you must pass criminality.[/quote]D4109125 wrote:benneviss wrote:Thanks for your prompt reply .
That means my child can not have ILR before I get , but child will have an extension of visa along with me , is that correct ?
quote="D4109125"]Do you mean the rule for ilr for the parent of a child who has been here for 7 years? If so, it's the parent who get Leave to remain for an extra 3 years then applies for ilr after 10 years.benneviss wrote:Hi Guys ,
As you know this rule is now back from 9th July 2012 .
I have specific query ;
I am eligible to apply for ILR in April 2014 . My child will finish 7 years in June 2013 .
My question is , can my child apply for ILR in June 2013 or not ?
Should I take extension in June 2013 with my child ? I might not be able to make it in April 2014 on the income threshold ?
[/quote]benneviss wrote:Let me ask this question differently ?
Can my alone child apply for ILR on the basis of 7 year concession?
If child can apply for citizenship alone , can child apply for ILR alone ?
Yes if you apply for flr under the 7 year rule you'd both be given 2.5 year extensions then after that you could apply for ilr. There is some criteria I.e. would be unreasonable to expect child to return etc as I'm sure it would. Though if you can get ilr in another way it might be quicker? The child must have also lives here continuously and you must pass criminality.D4109125 wrote:benneviss wrote:Thanks for your prompt reply .
That means my child can not have ILR before I get , but child will have an extension of visa along with me , is that correct ?
quote="D4109125"]Do you mean the rule for ilr for the parent of a child who has been here for 7 years? If so, it's the parent who get Leave to remain for an extra 3 years then applies for ilr after 10 years.benneviss wrote:Hi Guys ,
As you know this rule is now back from 9th July 2012 .
I have specific query ;
I am eligible to apply for ILR in April 2014 . My child will finish 7 years in June 2013 .
My question is , can my child apply for ILR in June 2013 or not ?
Should I take extension in June 2013 with my child ? I might not be able to make it in April 2014 on the income threshold ?
Greenie wrote:I think you are asking whether your child can directly qualify for ilr now, based on the fact that he has lived here for 7 years, the answer is no, it is not an automatic settlement application, if granted he will be granted limited leave for 2.5 years at a time and will need to spend 10 years in that route before being able to apply for ilr.
This rule if for citizenship you were asking about ILR. Two different things, you need to have ILR/ILE (or the parent does) in order to get citizenship.benneviss wrote:Guru what about this ,
What are chances of getting with this ? 9.17.9 particularly
http://www.bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/siteco ... iew=Binary
Greenie wrote:I think you are asking whether your child can directly qualify for ilr now, based on the fact that he has lived here for 7 years, the answer is no, it is not an automatic settlement application, if granted he will be granted limited leave for 2.5 years at a time and will need to spend 10 years in that route before being able to apply for ilr.
Given that 9.17.9 say the followingbenneviss wrote:Guru what about this ,
What are chances of getting with this ? 9.17.9 particularly
http://www.bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/siteco ... iew=Binary
Greenie wrote:I think you are asking whether your child can directly qualify for ilr now, based on the fact that he has lived here for 7 years, the answer is no, it is not an automatic settlement application, if granted he will be granted limited leave for 2.5 years at a time and will need to spend 10 years in that route before being able to apply for ilr.
there is next to no chance your child will be granted citizenship as neither parent is British or about to be granted citizenship.Citizenship and immigration status of the parents
9.17.9 We should normally expect that:
•
at least one parent is a British citizen or
•
one of the parents has applied to be registered or naturalised as a British citizen and the application is going to be granted (if the parent’s application is to be refused, we should normally refuse the minor’s application as well);
and
•
the other parent is either settled in the United Kingdom (see Annex F to Chapter 6); or
•
whilst not settled, is unlikely in the short or medium term to be returnable to his or her country of origin (eg s/he has been granted Discretionary Leave), and there is otherwise no reason to think that the child’s future does not lie in the United Kingdom.
Greenie wrote:Given that 9.17.9 say the followingbenneviss wrote:Guru what about this ,
What are chances of getting with this ? 9.17.9 particularly
http://www.bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/siteco ... iew=Binary
Greenie wrote:I think you are asking whether your child can directly qualify for ilr now, based on the fact that he has lived here for 7 years, the answer is no, it is not an automatic settlement application, if granted he will be granted limited leave for 2.5 years at a time and will need to spend 10 years in that route before being able to apply for ilr.
there is next to no chance your child will be granted citizenship as neither parent is British or about to be granted citizenship.Citizenship and immigration status of the parents
9.17.9 We should normally expect that:
•
at least one parent is a British citizen or
•
one of the parents has applied to be registered or naturalised as a British citizen and the application is going to be granted (if the parent’s application is to be refused, we should normally refuse the minor’s application as well);
and
•
the other parent is either settled in the United Kingdom (see Annex F to Chapter 6); or
•
whilst not settled, is unlikely in the short or medium term to be returnable to his or her country of origin (eg s/he has been granted Discretionary Leave), and there is otherwise no reason to think that the child’s future does not lie in the United Kingdom.