I'm not sure if the law has changed/tightened since, but this is exactly what I had done 5+ years ago.Richard W wrote: ↑Sun Oct 01, 2017 3:57 amIt would probably be refused. How are you going to persuade them of where you are going to live after the marriage?
You mean family permit. Residence cards can only be applied for from within the UK.
The latter should be enough (with one caveat) if you can get to the UK border.Xter27 wrote: ↑Sat Sep 30, 2017 11:59 pmNow I am aware this could take a long time and we may not have it when the time comes. So, my question is - would she need the EEA (FM) to re-enter the UK or would having me next to her and all the relevant documents (such as marriage certificate, etc.) be enough?
The caveat is that I strongly suspect that you intend to marry her so that immigration laws will allow you to live together. Under the Home Office interpretation of EEA rules, that appears to make it a marriage of convenience! While that is not a problem under the Immigration Rules, they don't allow you to bring her to the UK until you acquire settled status.
We were both living outside the UK for 2 years before my EEA partner moved back to the UK, and I applied from overseas for a UK Marriage Visitor visa to get married to her in the UK. We obviously understood the risk of this being refused, but took the chance because it was the shortest time frame for us to be able to live together again.
My wife secured a date for us to get married at the local town hall, and I applied for a marriage visitor visa using this information. I was granted a 3 month visa, which I used to initially visit the UK.
After we got married (6 weeks after I had flown to the UK, as that was the earliest date we had been able to secure at the town hall), EU law takes precedence over UK law, so I was then legally allowed to live and work in the UK, despite not having an EEA family member residence card. We did apply for this card promptly after we got married, and I was indeed granted my 5 year residence card within 2 months of applying.
I have recently applied and been granted permanent residency that was deemed to have been acquired 5 years on from the date we got married in the UK.
All this to say that what we did was completely transparent and legal, even though there was an element of risk involved in the very first step.
We didn't do this completely independently of course - we had sought advice over email and skype from an immigration expert who explained that this would be the best course of action (and so it proved).
We did take precautions to prove that our reason to get married was legitimate (proof of having lived together abroad for 2 years, etc.), and it seems that the Original Poster's case is just as legitimate, so while still a risk, it would be a calculated one.