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maaberglady45 wrote:Thats really fast.
You were lucky to get 90 days stamp for your wife, Am a British national and recently arrived with my non EEA husband but he was only given 30 days stamp in his passport
Very unfair for them to do that to us...
Means I ve to do loads of running around within one month
Hist2447 wrote:I've created this thread so I can answer any questions people may have who are considering using Surinder Singh to bring their families over to the UK but are worried about the new 'center of life' rules. This forum contained most of the information that helped with my success.
I'm a British citizen and even though my salary was enough for me to apply for a Settlement visa for my Pakistani wife ,I know there was up to 6 month wait for the visa as there was a backlog on settlement cases and I had read a lot of stories that people were being refused for minor mistakes.
I decided that it would be quicker and more interesting to use the Surinder Singh method to get to the UK. I thought of the 3 months in another EU country as a Honeymoon / Holiday.
Since I don't consider myself a great story teller, I’ll just list the steps I took.
1. I chose to apply for an Ireland Directive 2004/38/EC Visa due to Ireland’s proximity and shared language/culture to the UK (link to visa cover letter). I applied for an accompany EU spouse visa in late December 2013 and was granted the Visa in mid-January 2014. I flew to Ireland with my wife on the 27th of January 2014. At the airport my wife was given a 90 days stamp on her passport and explained if we wished to stay longer we need to apply for a EU1 card.
2. On arrival in Dublin I stayed in a hotel while I tried to find some rented accommodation. It took around a week to find a place. Daft.ie is a good place to start. I had some difficulties as people were reluctant to rent out to someone without a previous landlords reference. The rent in Dublin was around 500 euro for a 1 bedroom flat so I looked further out and found a house to rent in Co Laois for 600 a month. I signed a 6 month tenancy agreement, the landlord was in the process of selling his property so I was lucky it sold in 4 months and I was able to save on 2 months rent.
3. I moved into the rented house on the 3rd of February 2014. The landlord switched over the Gas and Electric bills to my wife’s and my name. I also asked my landlord to register me and my wife as tenants with the PRTB on the property.
4. We applied for a PPS number at the local Social Welfare Branch Office. Our joint tenancy agreement and passports were sufficient. It took some convincing and standing our ground for them to agree to issue my wife a PPS number, due to her being non EEA. They made a few phone calls and finally agreed to accept her application. Our PPS numbers arrived through the post a few days later.
5. We signed up for Sky TV, landline and broadband on the 8th of February. They don’t do a credit check, just need to pay 50 Euro on any Credit/Debit Card (I used my UK card).
7. Applied for a joint AIB bank account on the 12th of February. Used PPS no, passports and tenancy agreement as ID.
8. I decided to go self-employed, offering various computer services so I applied for a business bank account. Once that was open, I registered for Income Tax with the Revenue and created a website.
9. I registered a business name with the CRO, in the name of my computer services related business website.
10. I registered me and my wife with the local doctor, I requested a letter from the doctor confirming my registration.
11. I exchanged my UK driving license for an Irish license. It’s very easy to do and I assume it helps with proving that you transferred your center of life.
12. I paid for my business expenses with by business debit card and tried to use my personal account as much as possible instead of paying cash for bills and shopping. I also registered with the local library.
13.. Once I received my PRTB registration letter and I had 2 months of invoices, I applied for a EU1 Ireland residence card for my wife in April. I sent our passports, PPS letters, bank statements, work invoices, tax, PTRB, and business registration documents. I received all the documents back in around a week (before the 90 days were up on her passport stamp) and a letter to take to the Guarda (police) for a temp Stamp 4.
14. The Guarda give us an appointment in a few weeks (for the end of April). They issued my wife a 6 month Temporary stamp 4 which extended our permission to stay in Ireland for 6 months whist the EU1 was being decided.
15. I obtained a reentry visa from the INIS in Dublin (free of charge) in case I had difficulty in entering the UK so we could reenter Ireland as opposed to her being sent back to Pakistan from the UK.
16. On the 7th of May we drove to Belfast Airport (UK). I took with me all the documents that I had sent for the EU1 and a print outs of Directive 2004/38/EC , the immigration act with relevant parts highlighted and a FOI request and email confirming that a Family Permit is not required when travelling from Ireland as it is part of the Common Travel Area.
15. On Arrival at Manchester airport, I couldn't find anyone to request a 1A stamp so we headed home in England.
16. I tried to open a bank account for my wife but I had difficulty proving her status here so I applied for an EEA2 card on the 8th of June. I included exactly the same documents I had sent for the EU1 card in Ireland including the doctor’s letter and a copy of my Ireland driving license and library card. I did not include a cover letter though I did include a special delivery SAE.
18. I received a COA with the right to work on the 19th of June which helped me register her with the NHS, open a bank account and obtain a NI number.
19. I had redirected our mail from Ireland to the UK and had not got a reply on our EU1 Application yet so I thought I’d forget about hearing back from the Home Office regarding the UK Residence card until the 6 months were up.
20. I thought I had a slim chance as I has only lived in Ireland for 3 months and a week and with the Center of Life changes to regulation 9 but I was pleasantly surprised when I received my documents back including my wife’s residency card sticker on her passport on the 30th of July.
I have to thank God, the forum members and mods. I wouldn't have had a clue about what I was doing if I didn’t spend time reading the questions from member and replies from the mods. If anyone has any questions I’ll do my best to answer.
Yes .."a financially dependent parent of a British citizen can qualifyakash08 wrote:Is surender singh route applicable for parents?
1) When applying for the visa which marriage document did you submit? Did you submit the Nadra certificate or the English version of the nikah papers?I chose to apply for an Ireland Directive 2004/38/EC Visa due to Ireland’s proximity and shared language/culture to the UK (link to visa cover letter).
Hi, ThanksIM91 wrote:Hi.
Congrats and thanks for your post, its basically my step to step guide! .
I have a few questions looking at the first step.
1) When applying for the visa which marriage document did you submit? Did you submit the Nadra certificate or the English version of the nikah papers?I chose to apply for an Ireland Directive 2004/38/EC Visa due to Ireland’s proximity and shared language/culture to the UK (link to visa cover letter).
2) Also where did you apply for the visa as I thought there isn't an Irish embassy in Pakistan?
3) On the cover letter you have included the visa reference number, whats that?
Thanks!
The cover letter is specifically for Ireland as it quotes Ireland's EU Directive guidelines.IM91 wrote:Thank you for the reply and guidance and the attestation info.
I have got a job offer in Spain so now applying for the schengen via for my spouse.
Would the cover letter you linked be good enough for the schengen visa too? As I like the directive reference you put in.
Much appricated.
That would be Join Parent of EEA Nationaldesertman wrote:Thanks for sharing your story, it is really very helpful for others.
One question please, me and my wife are british citizen and I need to call my parents through this route, from Pakistan for which irish visa they should apply, will that be family visitor or some other type?
Please suggest. thanks.
Thanks. I keep going back and forth on the idea of which place to go. Its more about having a source of income rather than the country.st2447 wrote:The cover letter is specifically for Ireland as it quotes Ireland's EU Directive guidelines.IM91 wrote:Thank you for the reply and guidance and the attestation info.
I have got a job offer in Spain so now applying for the schengen via for my spouse.
Would the cover letter you linked be good enough for the schengen visa too? As I like the directive reference you put in.
Much appricated.
I would double check the visa you are applying for. I think you need to apply for the EU spouse visa not schengen from the Spanish embassy/consulate.