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EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:09 am
by NicolettaL
Hi
As I am married to a British Citizen I am thinking to apply to the document certifying my residence in the UK as "family member of a qualified EEA" (who in particular is British).
I prefer this route as my personal work history is quite fragmented.
I have been told though, that I should not use this path but the route of myself as qualified person.
I don't understand why. A British citizen surely is a special case of a EEA person, is this correct?
Has anybody got any precise insight on this regard?
Thanks
Nicoletta
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:14 am
by Casa
In this case your spouse is only considered as 'British'.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:16 am
by NicolettaL
HI Casa
Thanks for your reply but it is not clear to me.
Do you mean that as married to a British man I cannot use that route, as a spouse to a EEA qualified person?
Nicoletta
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:18 am
by CR001
+1 on what Casa said and also to add that a British citizen cannot 'exercise treaty rights' in the UK and therefore is not a 'qualified person'. A British citizen can only exercise treaty rights in a country other than their country of nationality.
You would need to qualify for PR in your own right as an EU citizen.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:21 am
by Casa
The plus point is that immediately after being issued with your PR card you would be able to apply for British citizenship without waiting for a further 12 months. That's assuming you meed all the standard conditions for BC.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:25 am
by noajthan
NicolettaL wrote:Hi
As I am married to a British Citizen I am thinking to apply to the document certifying my residence in the UK as "family member of a qualified EEA" (who in particular is British).
I prefer this route as my personal work history is quite fragmented.
I have been told though, that I should not use this path but the route of myself as qualified person.
I don't understand why. A British citizen surely is a special case of a EEA person, is this correct?
Has anybody got any precise insight on this regard?
Thanks
Nicoletta
BCs can only be considered as EEA nationals if they have ever moved &
exercised treaty rights in a.n.other EU country.
So, assuming you are an EEA national, you will need to be exercising treaty rights as a
qualified person in your own right (after your first 3 months in UK).
“EEA national” means a national of an EEA State who is not also a British citizen;
Ref Immigration Regulations, 2 (1).
http://www.eearegulations.co.uk/Archive/V20150406
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:30 am
by NicolettaL
Thank you all. How depressing. It would be easier if I was married to a German, but as married to a British himself, it is not possible. Is it not absurd?
Anyway, Thanks for the clarification, I definitely need a solicitor, this process seems a labyrinth put up with the only purpose to filter out the people who can afford a solicitor from the rest
Casa, what you say about being able to apply straight to the citizenship is very interesting, but how do you conclude that?
Thanks again
Nicoletta
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:36 am
by CR001
NicolettaL wrote:Casa, what you say about being able to apply straight to the citizenship is very interesting, but how do you conclude that?
Because the nationality rules say that a spouse of a British citizen only requires 3 years of residence which must include PR. It takes 5 years to gain PR or ILR, so you would be able to apply immediately as you will have PR and have more than 3 years residence.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:41 am
by LilyLalilu
The EEA PR application is quite straightforward, I don't think you need a solicitor as long as you read all the guidelines and regulations

In a nutshell, as long as you exercised treaty rights (working, studying with private health insurance job seeking, being self-sufficient + sufficient funds and private health insurance) for a continuous period of five years in the UK, and don't have any absences >6 months then you attain PR at the end of the five year period. All you need to do is complete the EEA PR form and submit it along with evidence of having exercised treaty rights and evidence of your continuous residence in the UK.
If you haven't exercised treaty rights in your own right then you unfortunately do not qualify for PR as of yet and will only qualify once you have the necessary five continuous years under your belt.
Casa is right in saying that you do not need 12 extra months on PR if married to a BC; you can check this here:
https://www.gov.uk/becoming-a-british-c ... sh-citizen where is states that anyone married to a British Citizen can apply for naturalisation as soon as they are free from immigration restrictions (i.e. have been granted a Document Certifying PR in the case of an EEA national) and meet all the other necessary residence, language and Life in the UK requirements.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:44 am
by NicolettaL
Re: CR001.
Thanks for your reply.
So the line in the citizenship form saying something like: "you need to hold your PR for 1 year before applying for citizenship" will not apply anymore?
If I understand well what you say, this is what I should do (Btw I have been in the UK for 11 years already and married for 8 years):
Complete the application for my document certifying my residence and apply
Wait for this document to return
Straight after, without waiting for one year, apply for the citizenship
Correct?
Many thanks
Nicoletta
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 9:49 am
by ohara
NicolettaL wrote:So the line in the citizenship form saying something like: "you need to hold your PR for 1 year before applying for citizenship" will not apply anymore?
Correct. If you are married to a British citizen, you can apply for naturalisation as soon as you are free of immigration time restrictions (basically once you have PR).
If you are not married to a British citizen, you have to be free of immigration time restrictions for 12 months before applying.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 12:00 pm
by noajthan
NicolettaL wrote:Thank you all. How depressing. It would be easier if I was married to a German, but as married to a British himself, it is not possible. Is it not absurd?
Anyway, Thanks for the clarification, I definitely need a solicitor, this process seems a labyrinth put up with the only purpose to filter out the people who can afford a solicitor from the rest
...
Welcome to our world - second class citizens in our own country

Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 1:51 pm
by secret.simon
noajthan wrote:Welcome to our world - second class citizens in our own country

All EEA citizens are equal. It's just that some are more equal than others.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 1:58 pm
by Casa
secret.simon wrote:noajthan wrote:Welcome to our world - second class citizens in our own country

All EEA citizens are equal. It's just that some are more equal than others.
The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal.
Aristotle
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 2:00 pm
by secret.simon
Casa, where did you get that quote? That pretty much sums up modern politics.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Thu Jan 14, 2016 2:01 pm
by Casa
I got it from my wise friend Aristotle

Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2016 3:04 pm
by NicolettaL
First thanks for the support, clear answers and nice quotes.
I have now resigned to the idea to apply as exercising myself 5 years of treaty rights, If I make it, as my recent work history is very fragmented.
Now comes the question:
As I am also married to a British. Should I mention this at all?
Or should I simply ignore all the points related to being married, living together with somebody else, and having a sponsor?
I have re-read the guidance notes many times and this is not clear.
So for instance, in the form question 1.10, it asks: relation to the sponsor (spouse, etc).
Shall I simply ignore it and leave it blank?
Thanks
Nicoletta
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2016 3:34 pm
by Casa
Your British husband can't be your sponsor. You are applying for PR in your own right.
Re: EEA PR as married to a British
Posted: Sat Jan 16, 2016 5:13 pm
by noajthan
NicolettaL wrote:...
Now comes the question:
As I am also married to a British. Should I mention this at all?
Or should I simply ignore all the points related to being married, living together with somebody else, and having a sponsor?
I have re-read the guidance notes many times and this is not clear.
So for instance, in the form question 1.10, it asks: relation to the sponsor (spouse, etc).
Shall I simply ignore it and leave it blank?
Thanks
Nicoletta
Yes.
Q1.9 asks for marital status so you can answer that.
Q1.10 Asks
If you’re applying as the family member of an EEA national or British citizen ...
- in this context you are not a family member so don't reply.