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(But it should all be unnecessary as gf is visa-free for Eire).The host Member State shall undertake an extensive examination of the personal circumstances and shall justify any denial of entry or residence to these people.
Worst case: go armed with a copy of the Directive.Note point about visitor/implied visa.
- There is no legal requirement that:
The EU citizen is already (or will be) living or working in a different EU member state
The non-EU family member holds a specific immigration visa or status. It is fine for them to have a nationally issued visa or a student visa or a visitor’s visa or even implied status
The family member apply in their country of origin
The family member resides or previously resided in the EU/EEA
There is also no legal requirement that you submit:
- bank statements
pay slips
letters from your present or future employer or school
letters of reference
proof that you will return at the end of the trip
airline tickets
confirmed hotel bookings
references or guarantees from people in the destination country
Do these acquaintances have any insight into these matters?mcdonald.raymond wrote:The worry is that we keep getting comments from acquaintances warning us of getting denied entry etc. as we are gearing up to book our flights in the next couple of weeks and they are casting doubt on the process.
We have had comments along the lines of: "it's impossible to just show up in a country and tell them that you want to live there and they grant you access".
So in your opinion - do you think that going ahead and buying one way tickets to Dublin through a straight forward travel agent will not cause any problems?
Thank you!
It is illegal to depart SA on a foreign passport if you have a South African passport and are a SA citizen. You should depart SA on your SA passport to avoid delays in you being allowed to leave.mcdonald.raymond wrote:I will leave RSA on my British passport (I am a dual citizenship holder, been living in RSA from a young age) and her on her RSA passport. Will that be OK?
Get sponsor into harness and working (and collating documentary supporting evidence) asap before applying for the EU-related paperwork.mcdonald.raymond wrote:Thank you very much for the re-assuring feedback, we are understandably nervous about this endeavor as there is so little information available about these kind of things here in South Africa.
So in terms of that sequence of events: arrive in Ireland, apply for leave to remain (for partner), become a registered citizen, seek out and find employment, apply for de facto partnership immigration permission (stamp 4 for partner), partner starts working etc...
Is that realistic/ achievable? And what kind of "ballpark" estimate of time would be needed for all of that to happen?
Again - thank you all for the feedback, it is very helpful for us to read something positive.
Yes, sorry I have actually read that somewhere before - thank you, I forgot.It is illegal to depart SA on a foreign passport if you have a South African passport and are a SA citizen. You should depart SA on your SA passport to avoid delays in you being allowed to leave.
My husband left on his UK passport from Johannesburg in 2008 and we almost missed our flight due to them questioning him about this at Passport Control as he is also a dual citizen.
But you are not apply for RoI/EU citizenship. You are going to Ireland as a British citizen to exercise treaty rights (i.e. work). Citizenship takes years and requires residence.mcdonald.raymond wrote:What are the critical documents I would require as a British Citizen registering for RoI/EU citizenship?
You have enough to work on for now without shooting for citizenship.mcdonald.raymond wrote:OK, thank you - I will not over complicate it. Thank you for helping us out with all the information - we really appreciate it!