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As you know A8 nationals had to be fully and properly registered for WRS in first 12 months of work.Orsolya wrote:Hi All,
Me and my partner would like to apply for permanent residency. But I'm not sure if we will get it, because we did not reported the second employer to Home Office in the first year. We only reported the 1. and the 3. employer in the first year.
We are Hungarians.
In details:
My partner:
- Came to the UK 12 Aug 2009. Started to work for the first employer from 12 Aug 2009. He got the Registration Card and the registration certificate dated 05 October 2009.
- Changed employer 2 month later, which was not reported. It was an agency.
- Changed employer from 15 February 2010 and it was registered with Home Office on 18 May 2010. He worked for this company until 11 January 2016.
- He started to work for a new employer from 11 January 2016.
My questions are:
- if he applies now for permanent residency, can he get it?
- From which date will his 5 years count? 18 May 2010 or 01 May 2011 or only from 11 January 2016 (because the registration with Home Office was not complete?)
My case:
- Came to the UK 12 Aug 2009. Started to work for the first employer from 12 Aug 2009. I got the registration card on 05 October 2009 and the registration certificate too.
- Changed employer from 20 October 2009. It was not reported to Home Office.
- Changed employer from 18 February 2010. It was registered on 26 May 2010 (It is the date of the registration certificate).
- Become self employed from October 2014.
My questions are:
- Will I be able the get permanent residency if I apply now?
- From which date will my 5 years count?
Thank you for any advise in advance.
Orsolya
Thank you for the answer.noajthan wrote:
As you know A8 nationals had to be fully and properly registered for WRS in first 12 months of work.
As you didn't comply fully with the registration process both your PR clocks will only have started in May 2011 (after WRS ended).
(Technically those companies committed an offence by employing non-registered staff).
Its not the end of the world, you both should have acquired PR by last May (2016).
That is assuming neither of you have enjoyed any prolonged absences from UK since 2011.
If you have ambitions for the privilege of citizenship you will need to wait until you have been free of immigration time restrictions for 12 months, so you could apply to naturalise in or after May 2017;
(assuming all other requirements for naturalisation have been/can be met).
Yes if unmarried you are an EFM. You have to have had a RC all this time in UK in order to apply for DCPR (but I think you said you have).Orsolya wrote:Hi!
I would like to ask more, please can you help me?
I have just realized, that I will not get a worker status (I was always employed or self employed), but I did not have enough income to qualify for worker status,...
How can we now apply for permanent residency card? What is the best option for us?
Is there any earning minimum what my partner needed to earn to be able to register me as a family member?
We are not married, we are only engaged. (So maybe extended family member?)
Thank you in advance.
It may be better to be included as a family member if you don't have adequate evidence of exercising treaty rights in your own right.Orsolya wrote:Hi!
Thank you for your reply. I'm Hungarian, so I did not need a residency card. Also I had full time job, before my first son was born 4 years ago.
- So as I see if I would not pass the PET/MET test, it is better to include me in my partners application for PRC?
- Or should we get married? We are together for 10 years now with 2 kids. Marriage just did not happened yet....
- As I read EFM can only get the permanent resident card for 6 month. Is it right or did I miss something?
Orsolya
A RC for EFMs is issued for 5 years not 6 months.I got the registration card on 05 October 2009 and the registration certificate too.
Residence in line with the regulations
The applicant must be able to show they have met the conditions of regulation 8 for five continuous years. For example, an applicant who was issued a residence card as an extended family member on the basis that they were a member of the EEA national’s household, must show evidence of cohabitation with that EEA national of the five year qualifying period for permanent residence.
There may be circumstances where the five year qualifying period is made up of residency as a family member and as an extended family member. This is acceptable provided that the total five year period in question is continuous.
The applicant must provide the required documents, or they will not be able to count that period towards the five year qualifying criteria
Applying for permanent residence
Under regulation 8 of the regulations you cannot consider an applicant to be the extended family member of an EEA national until they have been issued either a registration certificate, or residence card.
An extended family member is not eligible for a document certifying permanent residence or a permanent resident card if they have not previously been issued with one of the above documents
I ment Working registration certificate (WRS).I got the registration card on 05 October 2009 and the registration certificate too.
Your partner can apply for confirmation of PR in their own right.Orsolya wrote:I ment Working registration certificate (WRS).I got the registration card on 05 October 2009 and the registration certificate too.
I don't understand anything now..... sorry....
So it means he can apply for permanent residency card? Just would like to know if confirmation of PR means that.Your partner can apply for confirmation of PR in their own right.
What about if we get married now?To apply as a family member of your partner/sponsor it appears you need to have held a RC first (because you are an EFM).
Yes, 'confirmation of PR' card means DCPR.Orsolya wrote:So it means he can apply for permanent residency card? Just would like to know if confirmation of PR means that.Your partner can apply for confirmation of PR in their own right.
What about if we get married now?To apply as a family member of your partner/sponsor it appears you need to have held a RC first (because you are an EFM).
There may be circumstances where the five year qualifying period is made up of residency as a family member and as an extended family member. This is acceptable provided that the total five year period in question is continuous.
The applicant must provide the required documents, or they will not be able to count that period towards the five year qualifying criteria
So it means I will start my five years period when I get a RC or we get married?If you get married you will be a direct family member but note the following advice from the document I linked for you above:
There may be circumstances where the five year qualifying period is made up of residency as a family member and as an extended family member. This is acceptable provided that the total five year period in question is continuous.
The applicant must provide the required documents, or they will not be able to count that period towards the five year qualifying criteria
Marriage should not be done for migration reasons alone so maybe the RC is the way to go.Orsolya wrote:So it means I will start my five years period when I get a RC or we get married?
Which one should I go for now?
Can you help me how to apply for RC?Marriage should not be done for migration reasons alone so maybe the RC is the way to go.
Once you have your RC, perhaps for a year or so, you could always test the water with an application for DCPR. After all you only risk a £65 fee.
It's this one:Orsolya wrote:Can you help me how to apply for RC?
There are so many ways: https://www.gov.uk/eea-registration-certificate
- Why could I test the water after 1 year? I just don't understand the 1 year. Why could I apply and with what status?Once you have your RC, perhaps for a year or so, you could always test the water with an application for DCPR. After all you only risk a £65 fee.
I'm suggesting take a chance and apply on basis of an EEA partner/sponsor (who should have DCPR in less than a year) plus you will have a RC by then.Orsolya wrote:Thank you so much.
- Why could I test the water after 1 year? I just don't understand the 1 year. Why could I apply and with what status?Once you have your RC, perhaps for a year or so, you could always test the water with an application for DCPR. After all you only risk a £65 fee.
Thank you, but why after 1 year? Why not 5 years? And would I apply as an extended family member?I'm suggesting take a chance. It doesn't mean it will work. Desperate times call for desperate measures.
Because in 5 years there will be no PR if UK really has left EU.Orsolya wrote:Thank you, but why after 1 year? Why not 5 years? And would I apply as an extended family member?
Marriage is fine too.Orsolya wrote:Thank you. I understand.
So thinking about marriage. It would not be a good choice to get married at any time, because if we married, I will need 5 years marriage to be able to apply for PRC (FM)? Or it would be same and I could try to apply for PRC(FM) after 1 year too?
The categories of family members come from EU law and Directive 2004/38/EC.Orsolya wrote:Hi!
I have more questions.
- Can you help me where I can find that a family member (wife) need to be married for 5 years to be able to apply for a PRC (FM)? Application guidance does not say that a family member needs to be married 5 years to be able to apply for PRC(FM). Only the family member needs to be living in the UK for 5 years.
I have found that a family member needs to live in the UK for 5 years, but I did not find that this 5 years need to be as a family member.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... s_v3_0.pdf
"If they have lived in the UK for a continuous period of 5years, direct family members of an EEA national sponsor are allowed to live in the UK on a permanent basis."
If we marry now, I will be a family member. I have lived here more than 5 years, so it looks we have everything what we need, don't we?
You are only a direct family member (as a spouse) by becoming married.Family members who come under regulation 7(1)(a),(b) and (c) of the Immigration (EEA) Regulations 2006 (‘the Regulations’) are often called ‘core ‘or ‘direct’ family members.
The following can be considered as direct family members: spouse or civil partner
noajthan wrote:... note the following advice from the document I linked for you above:
There may be circumstances where the five year qualifying period is made up of residency as a direct family member and as an extended family member. This is acceptable provided that the total five year period in question is continuous.
The applicant must provide the required documents, or they will not be able to count that period towards the five year qualifying criteria