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That's probably the best way for you and your wife.sadmanonatrain wrote:I do not currently earn the £18,400. I did in Japan but not now in New Zealand. This makes almost every route difficult as I'll be entering with no job or place to live really... She insists a work visa is impossible for her as she doesn't fill any of the shortage roles. Does it only have to be the shortage roles? Can she be offered a job from anyone? She's a translator.
Last year I remember reading information about the EEA permit as a workaround as it has no salary requirement? Go and work in Germany, live and work together there for a couple of months and now I'm considered an EU citizen and can bring along a spouse of any nationality? (man this seems all backwards).
Hey, you've got a wide range of questions there...but I'll answer what I can.sadmanonatrain wrote:I'll keep this short'ish as I assume its the same sh*t but different toilet for long time users of the forum.
I'm a UK citizen/passport and I will be marrying my Japanese partner. We've been country hopping on working holiday visas for the past two years and I want to move back to the UK with my wife to be (we'll get married in New Zealand).
She's tried 3 years in a row to get the UK equivalent of the working holiday visa. But of course she hasn't got it because it's based on a random lottery system. Meaning someone with no English ability whatsoever can obtain this 2 year long visa while my degree educated partner can not. Ironic seeing how strict everything else is...(it actually makes my blood boil...)
Can someone please troubleshoot me by asking qualifying questions for all visas possible?
I do not currently earn the £18,400. I did in Japan but not now in New Zealand. This makes almost every route difficult as I'll be entering with no job or place to live really... She insists a work visa is impossible for her as she doesn't fill any of the shortage roles. Does it only have to be the shortage roles? Can she be offered a job from anyone? She's a translator.
Last year I remember reading information about the EEA permit as a workaround as it has no salary requirement? Go and work in Germany, live and work together there for a couple of months and now I'm considered an EU citizen and can bring along a spouse of any nationality? (man this seems all backwards).
But then I also read about this 'family of a settled person' - can we both turn up at Gatwick and immediately apply for this? The terminology used is 'switch' - does she need to be on a visa already? Are there salary requirements? They are not mentioned on the website. What visa can she get to 'switch'? Visitor visa?
Huh? Where's the souse visa gone? Has the name changed? Is there still a salary requirement?
*sigh. I'm lost and need guidance. If you haven't rolled your eyes at the sheer naivety; any help and guidance is hugely appreciated.
Regards,
Nigel
p.s that was short at all - sorry
Vinny, thank you. Just like that I will do this; as it seems nothing has changed since last year of me looking into this. I was offered a teaching English as a second language position but didn't have the funds to fly both of us there and get the accommodation. So now we're in New Zealand acquiring these funds.vinny wrote:That's probably the best way for you and your wife.sadmanonatrain wrote:I do not currently earn the £18,400. I did in Japan but not now in New Zealand. This makes almost every route difficult as I'll be entering with no job or place to live really... She insists a work visa is impossible for her as she doesn't fill any of the shortage roles. Does it only have to be the shortage roles? Can she be offered a job from anyone? She's a translator.
Last year I remember reading information about the EEA permit as a workaround as it has no salary requirement? Go and work in Germany, live and work together there for a couple of months and now I'm considered an EU citizen and can bring along a spouse of any nationality? (man this seems all backwards).
HO are clearly playing hard ball now (possibly emboldened by the coming referendum & talk of Brexit & etc).sadmanonatrain wrote:... So the SS has got tougher? I mean I was using the 'couple of months' very loosely there. 6 months would suffice?
Without having clicked on your links (which I will) what specifically has changed? I was under the impression being married, living in the same place (contracts etc), both working and having a joint bank account would be enough? Do we need to attend language schools now too?(half joke)
...
Cheers.
Yes people do do this with 'just' their spouse.sadmanonatrain wrote:I've read through the guidance of SS and I don't see any foreseeable problems in writing :S But please judge yourselves:
We will live (rent), bank and work in Germany for 12 months.
We will both be taking German language lessons (with cert.)
...
Under 12B it states b. Does the British citizen have any other family members resident in the host member state - I do? I was born in Germany to a German father. His side of the family are all there. What does this mean for me?
People have used this route without having children right?
...
Just because you currently have no valid German passport does not make you lose German citizenship.sadmanonatrain wrote:Thanks for your reply. No i understand; my passport says I'm a British citizen and the UK is my place of permanent residence (though I haven't been there for 2.5 years).
Excuse the random reply as I've only just seen this post.ALKB wrote:Just because you currently have no valid German passport does not make you lose German citizenship.sadmanonatrain wrote:Thanks for your reply. No i understand; my passport says I'm a British citizen and the UK is my place of permanent residence (though I haven't been there for 2.5 years).
If you were born to a German father in Germany you are German unless you have done something to lose citizenship automatically such as naturalising as a non-EEA national.
Have you ever had a German passport as a child?
I assume you lived in Germany at least for a little while? Were registered in Germany, have a German birth certificate, etc. ?
I don't think you fully understand what people are saying here.sadmanonatrain wrote:I'll have to consult my parents to better understand but I'm pretty sure my nationality is British(tad embarrassing if I'm wrong)
You're right I'm not understanding as all this hasn't crossed my mind, ever. So in terms of using the country of Germany for the SS route... for me? Because I hold citizenship at birth to that country, it would be a no-go because technically it is a home country of mine - correct? (even though I'd be exercising the route as a British citizen).ohara wrote:Likewise, a child born in the United States (for example) to a British father and Finnish mother would gain American, British and Finnish citizenship at birth, due to the nationality laws of those 3 countries.sadmanonatrain wrote:I'll have to consult my parents to better understand but I'm pretty sure my nationality is British(tad embarrassing if I'm wrong)
noajthan wrote:Maybe you can renounce German nationality - if that can help.
UnthinkableALKB wrote:noajthan wrote:Maybe you can renounce German nationality - if that can help.
Or he could renounce his British nationality ...
You should get clear about your nationality status. As I understand it, you are a dual national from birth, regardless of what kind of identity documents you are currently holding. AND if you go to live in Germany and you knowingly or unknowingly give false information about your nationality and such to the authorities, you might get into a bit of hot water sooner or later (maybe much later but it will be unpleasant nevertheless).sadmanonatrain wrote: Excuse the random reply as I've only just seen this post.
I'll have to consult my parents to better understand but I'm pretty sure my nationality is British(tad embarrassing if I'm wrong). Yes, I can at any point for the rest of my life have the right to become a proper 'German' because I was born before a certain date, in the country to a German father (I think).
My parents divorced when I was about 10. We moved to my mothers country of England. Did I have a German passport for that move? I don't know, don't think so as its just an EU move of countries and being a child I don't know if there were alternative travel cards or something. For the other 10 years I lived and grew up in the UK, holding a British passport and residency. I know for sure that I have a German birth certificate yes (I remember having to pay stupid money to get it translated for passport many years ago).
I would appreciate the ramifications of the above. As I hadn't considered it at all because I don't hold German citizenship/am not a resident. It's not a deal breaker as there are many other countries, just a shame.
ALKB I appreciate your long post. I don't see what your say to be wrong so we won't be going to Germany anyway. We'll have to go to another country (any suggestions?). I was thinking Austria but I have grandparents living there and I assume that's another no-no. So I don't want any association with anything or anyone regarding relatives/birth/nationality to keep the application clean!ALKB wrote:You should get clear about your nationality status. As I understand it, you are a dual national from birth, regardless of what kind of identity documents you are currently holding. AND if you go to live in Germany and you knowingly or unknowingly give false information about your nationality and such to the authorities, you might get into a bit of hot water sooner or later (maybe much later but it will be unpleasant nevertheless).sadmanonatrain wrote: Excuse the random reply as I've only just seen this post.
I'll have to consult my parents to better understand but I'm pretty sure my nationality is British(tad embarrassing if I'm wrong). Yes, I can at any point for the rest of my life have the right to become a proper 'German' because I was born before a certain date, in the country to a German father (I think).
My parents divorced when I was about 10. We moved to my mothers country of England. Did I have a German passport for that move? I don't know, don't think so as its just an EU move of countries and being a child I don't know if there were alternative travel cards or something. For the other 10 years I lived and grew up in the UK, holding a British passport and residency. I know for sure that I have a German birth certificate yes (I remember having to pay stupid money to get it translated for passport many years ago).
I would appreciate the ramifications of the above. As I hadn't considered it at all because I don't hold German citizenship/am not a resident. It's not a deal breaker as there are many other countries, just a shame.
There is no 'becoming a proper German' in German nationality law. You either are German or you are not. No shades of black-red-gold here.
You might have been endorsed on your mother's passport (don't know much about UK passports, just a wild guess) when you moved to the UK or maybe you held a German Kinderreisepass. Travel without identity documents is not possible between Germany and the UK, not now and not 10 years ago. I'd strongly suggest to talk to your parents and the nearest German Embassy before you make the move.
By the way, you can get an international version of your birth certificate which states all information in German, English and French. I have those for my daughters and got one for myself recently; it does away with the need for translations in most countries.
Take a scan through the forum, all is not rosy with Ireland for Surinder Singhers. Bureaucracy, delays, applicants being profiled and (apparently) blocked by authorities.sadmanonatrain wrote:Which then leaves me with a wide variety of countries I don't hold any strong feelings for wanting to move to. I try to think of it as exciting or a mini adventure for 6 months but we've been relocating for the past 2 years and I just want it to end now.
Ireland is popular with these routes. Just the working holiday for my partner is a bit strict (having to apply physically in Japan, high amount of money in the bank). In the maybe pile for now. Probably most appealing due to its proximity and the ease of integration.
Thanks.