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Thanks for reply.secret.simon wrote:You already have ILR. So, any child born to you would be a British citizen automatically if born in the UK, even before you acquire British citizenship.
The status of EU citizens in the UK is unclear at the moment, but there is an expectation that they will continue under the same rules and regulations that they entered under. I think it would be prudent for your German husband to not spend more than six months a year outside the UK. That way, he is most likely to retain his rights under EU law.
As you have settlement it would not be under your old Tier 2. It would be under the rules for a Brit to bring a spouse to the UK, where you have to show you can afford to sponsor him and he has no access to public funds.diasyfrau wrote:I am an non-EEA with ILR
I apply for BC in Sept 2017.
We have also heard of the massive costs and expenses of becoming a spouse of settled person, not least as he would have to apply under my old Tier 2 general category apparently.
diasyfrau wrote:Thanks for the reply.
I may be wrong on this, but I thought that I read on the government website that if you get ilr/citizenship via a visa category and then want a spouse to get a spouse visa they have to apply under your old category (as in they have to act as if you were still in your visa category, even though you already have ilr/citizenship). I may be wrong. You are wrong. This would ONLY be relevant if the spouse has held a PBS dependent visa prior to the main applicant (you) getting ILR.
I don't find the rules for spouse of British-born citizens much better either - quite restrictive and cumbersome. Better than visa spouse, for sure, but much worse than the EU category he is currently in. I think we are agreed that unless the spouse category changes substantially very soon we will be avoiding it completely. Unlikely to change to become easier for migrants. It was easier up till July 2012 and due to abuse, it was made harder.
I think I am discovering we clearly want too much from the system! A baby, enough savings for a deposit on a house, and settlement for my hubby is just a bit too much to expect apparently!
Relax. Too much stress is not when it comes to baby plans.diasyfrau wrote:I am an non-EEA with ILR (Sept 2016) with an EEA husband (German, arrived in U.K. Aug 2013) and a 2 year old daughter with initially German passport now British too. Hubby is self employed with limited company (U.K. Registered Sep 2013) and works from home.
We are planning second child and had planned to hopefully have child in late 2017 if it works out.
...
Any creative solutions out there? We are thinking our only options are to either forego having child for another 18 months or so (not ideal as I am 35) or else forego being able to upgrade our flat for a few more years - very cramped now given he works from home!
People do take time out from the British climate. Under 6 months can be for any reason, no need to justify it.diasyfrau wrote:Thank for replies
Wow - thanks for that info - I got mixed up on the spouse categories because I had been on the PBS route! Yes - my husband has never been my dependant in terms of visas as we opted to keep separate visa categories when we got married because I was so close to ilr already.
Thanks for the correction.
Lol! I hear what you're saying about Britain potentially not having left the EU by late 2018. As you clearly appreciated if a retrospective deadline is imposed for the old rules to apply e.g. referendum date was our concern.
Do people have experience of breaks in stay of 1 year or so due to maternity leave in the EEA - PR route? I had heard of some people doing in this in the tier 2 route. I will go check out the rlevant forum. We didn't do the same with our daughter because we were worried about breaking my continuous residence period. A shame really, as it was quite stressful welcoming a new baby with no family around!
Isnt' that why Brits voted to leave the EU? To take back control of their country to ensure a return to the British sense of fair play?noajthan wrote: the traditional sense of British fair play may yet kick in and save the day.
There's also the sense of fair play that wrote transitional arrangements for things like CSI, for McCarthy & etc into EEA Regs.Petaltop wrote:Isnt' that why Brits voted to leave the EU? To take back control of their country to ensure a return to the British sense of fair play?noajthan wrote: the traditional sense of British fair play may yet kick in and save the day.
Either I misunderstand what you are saying here or you have misunderstood the workings of German nationality law.Right now, as far as Germany is concerned, my daughter was only entitled to acquire British citizenship (as I acquired settled status in the UK after her birth) because 1. Britain is an EU country, (entitlement to parents' citizenships acquired after a child's birth is not automatic except in the case of EU countries) and 2. Even so, at age 23 she will have to choose between the two citizenships. (She needed Germany's permission to become British because Germany does not ordinarily allow citizens to acquire further citizenships - the EU is an exception. But every German child is entitled to hold for life whatever citizenships the parents held at the time of their birth.) We are hoping to avoid the scenario we faced with my daughter with a later child, and realistically we may even have to plan on a 2018 birth to be safe.