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you also need csi for whole familyenglishman9 wrote:my Non-EU partner is working.
I am and plan to continue to be a homemaker, stay at home and look after the kids while she works.
After being here 5 years can she apply for Permanent Residence? As she is working but EU National is not?
I received a reply from EU advice but wanted to know of any experience of this.
Thanks
According to EU Advice:
In order to gain a right of permanent residence, as the family member of an EU citizen returning home after working in another EU country, your wife would need to demonstrate that:
(1) you have been living in the UK for a continuous period of at least five years before your partner applied (you should be able to prove this by any menas, for example bills in your name, any rental contract, etc.), and
(2) your partner has been living in the UK for a continuous period of at least five years before applying (your partner's passport should provide details of her date of entry in the UK and any other document that shows she has been in the UK for the last five years), and
(3) your partner is the family member of an EU citizen, and
(4) during this period, neither you nor your partner were absent from the UK for more than 6 months (or one year in exceptional circumstances).
As a result, these documents should suffice to prove conclusively that your partner was living in the UK for five years as the family member of an EU citizen who had previously worked in another EU country.
Your application would be on the basis of being a 'self-sufficient' person under EEA Treaty Rights, so this is the term you need to focus on. As mentioned above, you'll need to have comprehensive sickness insurance in your name covering the whole family, including your working partner (regardless of whether her work package includes health insurance) and children. The 'brief' explanation of this in the UKBA site is either a private health insurance covering most non-emergency procedures or non-UK EHIC cards. Further discussion elsewhere in this forum. The other measure is sufficient income to prove you do not need state support. No particular minimum amount - just collect and submit your bank statements. The other thing to be mindful of with self-sufficient status is that you need to be much more careful about public funds than an EEA national worker does. Child benefit, for example, is out. There is a doc on the UKBA site about what you can claim and what you can't.englishman9 wrote:my Non-EU partner is working.
I am and plan to continue to be a homemaker, stay at home and look after the kids while she works.
After being here 5 years can she apply for Permanent Residence? As she is working but EU National is not?
I received a reply from EU advice but wanted to know of any experience of this.
Thanks
According to EU Advice:
In order to gain a right of permanent residence, as the family member of an EU citizen returning home after working in another EU country, your wife would need to demonstrate that:
(1) you have been living in the UK for a continuous period of at least five years before your partner applied (you should be able to prove this by any menas, for example bills in your name, any rental contract, etc.), and
(2) your partner has been living in the UK for a continuous period of at least five years before applying (your partner's passport should provide details of her date of entry in the UK and any other document that shows she has been in the UK for the last five years), and
(3) your partner is the family member of an EU citizen, and
(4) during this period, neither you nor your partner were absent from the UK for more than 6 months (or one year in exceptional circumstances).
As a result, these documents should suffice to prove conclusively that your partner was living in the UK for five years as the family member of an EU citizen who had previously worked in another EU country.
So the health insurance coverage I receive through work (it includes outpatient coverage) does not count as CSI?jotter wrote: ... As mentioned above, you'll need to have comprehensive sickness insurance in your name covering the whole family, including your working partner (regardless of whether her work package includes health insurance) and children.
Well actually I have Private Nordic Gold coverage right now but I was planning on cancelling it because I recently started a job that has health insurance as a benefit (I have to opt in and it takes a portion of my pay). Since it's an optional benefit that I am paying for is it still a private insurance?Englandd wrote:normally there are two types of health insurance plans:
1. Private medical insurance for individuals (Individual buys for itself & family)
2. Company medical insurance (employer buys for workers as part of employer liability at work)
which one is yours. provider name and type of health insurance policy.
The insurance doesn't need to be private as in "individual" (not a company) but rather private as in "not paid by public money".hellrose wrote:Well actually I have Private Nordic Gold coverage right now but I was planning on cancelling it because I recently started a job that has health insurance as a benefit (I have to opt in and it takes a portion of my pay). Since it's an optional benefit that I am paying for is it still a private insurance?
Yes, it is. Any health cover that is not NHS and is (relatively) comprehensive should satisfy this requirement.hellrose wrote:Well actually I have Private Nordic Gold coverage right now but I was planning on cancelling it because I recently started a job that has health insurance as a benefit (I have to opt in and it takes a portion of my pay). Since it's an optional benefit that I am paying for is it still a private insurance?Englandd wrote:normally there are two types of health insurance plans:
1. Private medical insurance for individuals (Individual buys for itself & family)
2. Company medical insurance (employer buys for workers as part of employer liability at work)
which one is yours. provider name and type of health insurance policy.