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noajthan wrote:Your PR clock started in Feb 2012.
Youy should have acquired PR by next month.
Where were children born?
if in UK they don't need to acquire PR. Register them as citizens once one parent is settled.
Read PR guidance - its quite comprehensive.
Post updated (above).baby1242 wrote:Thank you for this.yes our kids are born in the Uk. Also can I apply PR for my husband along with me next month or has he to wait till September 2017??
I have been on maternity leave however I presume that is considered as no gaps as I did not resign from my job and I have not been out of the UK for more than 10 days.noajthan wrote:Post updated (above).baby1242 wrote:Thank you for this.yes our kids are born in the Uk. Also can I apply PR for my husband along with me next month or has he to wait till September 2017??
Are you sure no gaps in your timeline of activities?
Maternity leave?
hellosecret.simon wrote:Did the maternity leave last less than 52 week from start to finish?
If so, you should be fine.
Were there any other absences (of the person holding EU citizenship) of more than six months from the UK? You are allowed a single one year absence for emergencies lasting less than 12 months.
Thank you so much...secret.simon wrote:Was the EEA citizen working the rest of the five years? Then she and her husband will qualify for PR in February 2017 and British citizenship a year from then.
Should be acceptable and you should have retained worker status (assuming you were a worker qualified person) as long as you have rock-solid supporting evidence to back our case.baby1242 wrote:hellosecret.simon wrote:Did the maternity leave last less than 52 week from start to finish?
If so, you should be fine.
Were there any other absences (of the person holding EU citizenship) of more than six months from the UK? You are allowed a single one year absence for emergencies lasting less than 12 months.
1st maternity 2013 was 36 weeks
2nd maternity 2015 was 36 weeks
we have been on holidays for about 15 days in total each year outside the UK.
yes we are legally married and I am paying Class 1 NI...the following are the documents I plan to sendsecret.simon wrote:If you are legally married to your husband and you have proof of the marriage (marriage certificate, nikahnama issued in a country that recognises Islamic marriage, etc), there is no need to prove dependency. Just the appropriate certificate proving the marriage is sufficient. EU law is much less stringent than UK law.
But if you are working part-time, do you earn more than the MET/PET threshold of about £155 per week? Essentially, are you paying Class 1 NI contributions on your earnings? If not, your case will be investigated in closer detail by the Home Office.
Your residence will only count if your work is "genuine and effective" and not "marginal and ancillary". Broadly, if you stopped working, would there be minimal or a significant change to your lifestyle? If the former, that does not count as work for the purposes of EU law.
secret.simon wrote:You might be overegging the pudding. Stick to the basics.
Proof of identity for both applicants - Your passports.
Proof that you have been exercising treaty rights - for the EEA spouse only - Payslips, P60s, proof of maternity leave and that you resumed within 52 weeks(relevant emails, letters, etc)
Proof of relationship - marriage certificate
Everything else is superfluous.
Some councils now provide a service (for a fee) that check that you have the correct documentation. I can't seem to find the link online for it, but I am sure others here will provide the link.
Were both children born in the UK?
Then they are entitled to register as British citizens immediately after you acquire PR as well. No need for them to acquire PR, which would have complicated your naturalisation applications.baby1242 wrote:both the kids were born in the UK
secret.simon wrote:Then they are entitled to register as British citizens immediately after you acquire PR as well. No need for them to acquire PR, which would have complicated your naturalisation applications.baby1242 wrote:both the kids were born in the UK