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Regarding treaty rights & continuity of residence for acquiring PR, the regulations permit a one-off absence for study/vocational training.rvkbound wrote:Hi there,
my situation is a bit unusual, so that's why I decided to start a new topic. (I've really looked everywhere for an answer!)
So, I'm an EU citizen. I've been living in the UK since September 2010 when I came here to study, with a 8-month long break to do my year abroad in another EEA country (this was a compulsory part of my degree, so shouldn't count as "absence" per se and should not reset my PR clock, but please correct me if I'm wrong).
...
I'm currently single, but my partner is a British citizen and we're getting married in February next year. By that time I should have the PR status.
So, when I apply for Naturalisation, which of the two qualifying periods applies -- 3 or 5 years? The Booklet AN (which I've read like two hundred times, and it doesn't get any clearer!) says, and I quote:
...
So, does that mean that, as a person that will have ILR in the form of PR at that time (again, hopefully), I only need to prove my residence for 3 years?
...
Thank you so much for reading it, and hopefully some of you might know the answer!
The difficulty now is the latest changes to regulations, as reflected in the latest AN guidance booklet:rvkbound wrote:Thank you so much for your reply!
Do you think it would harm my case if I applied for PR now, before marrying a BC, and then apply for naturalisation afterwards? I understand I will still have to submit evidence of residency for 5 years instead of 3.
I also have one last question -- if, during my studying abroad I came to the UK for a visit multiple times, does it still count as one absence due to studies?
I suppose this is where I get confused: If you are a national of a member state of the EEA and do not have indefinite leave to remain in the United Kingdom, you will need to have been resident in the United Kingdom for at least five years even if you are married to a British citizen.
Can an EEA citizen get ILR? I thought PR was an equivalent of that for EEA citizens, but it's not as you said.
Thank you!
Judging by recent forum posts it is a controversial change. If not married to a BC this is saying 6 years of evidence is now required (not 5)But remember that, unless you are married to or the civil partner of a British citizen, you should
normally have held permanent resident status for 12 months before applying for naturalisation. This means that you may need to wait until you have been in the UK for 6 years before you can apply.
You will need to provide evidence of 6 years continuous residence when you apply for your permanent residence card
I believe it's a typo and Obie concurs.LilyLalilu wrote:I think that's a typo in the guide; as far as I am aware the PR requirements haven't changed and you still only need to prove 5 years of residence to obtain confirmation of PR.
So for Q2.2, 3 years details of absence is asked for, (if married to BC).2.2
Please give details of all absences from the United Kingdom during the last five years. If you
are married or in a civil partnership to a British citizen, give details for the last three years only