Post
by secret.simon » Tue Nov 21, 2017 12:22 am
You have done your homework.
A Section 3(2) entitlement would have required you to have been resident in the UK for at least three continuous years, with absences of no more than 90 days per year, at any time before the child's birth.
A Section 3(5) entitlement (meaning that it cannot be refused) would arise if you moved with the child to the UK and were resident with the child for three continuous years, with absences of no more than 90 days per year.
The only two alternatives that I can foresee are that your child applies for registration at discretion before the age of 18 under Section 3(1) or that he naturalises as an adult in his own right.
Both these approaches will require him to acquire ILR (or PR). Does your son have German or another EEA citizenship?
If he has an EEA passport and he is resident in the UK for five years and he has CSI (private health insurance) and depending on the outcome of the Brexit negotiations (I know, lots of ands), he should acquire PR automatically under EU law.
He could then apply for registration under Section 3(1), which is registration at the discretion of the Home Office. But he will need to make a compelling argument for why he should be granted the registration. Typically, such registration is only granted if one parent has British citizenship and the other parent and the child has ILR or PR. Also, if he is granted registration under Section 3(1), he will himself be a British citizen by descent and not be able to pass on his British citizenship under any form of entitlement (not even Section 3(2), which requires one grandparent to have been born in the UK).
In a worst case situation, if he acquires PR under the conditions listed two paragraphs above, he could naturalise as a British citizen under his own steam after his 18th birthday. In that case, he will acquire British citizenship on his own and will become a British citizen otherwise than by descent, thus with the ability to pass on his citizenship to one generation born abroad.
So, it all hinges on what his current nationalities are.
I am not a lawyer or immigration advisor. My statements/comments do not constitute legal advice. E&OE. Please do not PM me for advice.