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Thank you!noajthan wrote:You could be granted entry at the border on basis you are spouse/dependent of an EU citizen.
Evidence of status and relationship required.
noajthan wrote:Congratulations.
If turning up at border, you need to be in a position to be able to prove relationship with your sponsor if asked.
No, because you could be lodgers, siblings or anything else.frantii92 wrote:noajthan wrote:Congratulations.
If turning up at border, you need to be in a position to be able to prove relationship with your sponsor if asked.
Thank you!
The proof that we have is the same address in the U.K on my bank statement for the last 3 months. Is it sufficient?
noajthan wrote:No, because you could be lodgers, siblings or anything else.frantii92 wrote:noajthan wrote:Congratulations.
If turning up at border, you need to be in a position to be able to prove relationship with your sponsor if asked.
Thank you!
The proof that we have is the same address in the U.K on my bank statement for the last 3 months. Is it sufficient?
You need proof of marriage. You must have something from the Gibraltar trip and all dealings with registrar.
noajthan wrote:Aim to enter as EEA dependent. Good luck.
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... ndents.pdfshould be given “every reasonable opportunity” to prove by other means that he is the family member of an EEA national;
a person should not automatically be refused admission as a result of not being able to produce adequate evidence.
As a guide within a week of arriving at port should be adequate
noajthan wrote:As per UK BF Ops Manual youhttps://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... ndents.pdfshould be given “every reasonable opportunity” to prove by other means that he is the family member of an EEA national;
a person should not automatically be refused admission as a result of not being able to produce adequate evidence.
As a guide within a week of arriving at port should be adequate
noajthan wrote:As per UK BF Ops Manual youhttps://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... ndents.pdfshould be given “every reasonable opportunity” to prove by other means that he is the family member of an EEA national;
a person should not automatically be refused admission as a result of not being able to produce adequate evidence.
As a guide within a week of arriving at port should be adequate
RC is optional. It is not a 'visa'.frantii92 wrote:Hi,
I am about to submit my application. However, I have some problems.
I am a tier4 student visa holder, visa expires on 21/01/2017. I am married with Italian partner who risides in UK. We got married in Gibraltar and still have not gotten a marriage certificate. As my visa expires soon, can you advise what I can do?
Is there an option to submit some documents later?
noajthan wrote:RC is optional. It is not a 'visa'.frantii92 wrote:Hi,
I am about to submit my application. However, I have some problems.
I am a tier4 student visa holder, visa expires on 21/01/2017. I am married with Italian partner who risides in UK. We got married in Gibraltar and still have not gotten a marriage certificate. As my visa expires soon, can you advise what I can do?
Is there an option to submit some documents later?
You don't have to 'replace' your visa.
noajthan wrote:RC is optional. It is not a 'visa'.frantii92 wrote:Hi,
I am about to submit my application. However, I have some problems.
I am a tier4 student visa holder, visa expires on 21/01/2017. I am married with Italian partner who risides in UK. We got married in Gibraltar and still have not gotten a marriage certificate. As my visa expires soon, can you advise what I can do?
Is there an option to submit some documents later?
You don't have to 'replace' your visa.
There are no visas on EU migration route you have decided to switch to.frantii92 wrote:Ok, in my case if I will stay in the U.K. After my visa expired, does it mean then that I am staying illegally?
This is what makes me worried.
Well my spouse has PR in the U.K. and he is also an EU national.noajthan wrote:There are no visas on EU migration route you have decided to switch to.frantii92 wrote:Ok, in my case if I will stay in the U.K. After my visa expired, does it mean then that I am staying illegally?
This is what makes me worried.
That's the whole point of it: free movement.
And no, you won't be illegal if you have an EU sponsor who is a qualified person and you are their direct family member.
Ofcourse if there is some hitch and sponsor is not actually a qualified person or you are not married (perhaps due to some technicality) then yes, you will become an overstayer.
That is the difference between direct family members and extended family members who in the scheme of things are relatively lower down in the EU food chain.frantii92 wrote:Well my spouse has PR in the U.K. and he is also an EU national.
I seem to have read a FOI where the home office declared someone on a tier 4 to be illegal for the period after their Tier 4 expired until they get their residence card.
The difference was that person was not married and was using the unmarried partner route.
I did not enter the U.K. as the partner of an EEA national, rather just as a Tier 4 student. This is the thing that I would like further clarification on.