- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
Travelling while the application is not recommend at all, as once the permit expires she actually has no proof that she should be allowed back into the UKmomito2a wrote: ↑Thu Dec 14, 2017 1:57 pmGreetings
My wife is Lao National, married to French National (me !)
We moved to UK beginning of September, she entered with a 6-months EEA Family Permit visa which is due to expire in February 2018. What's next ?
1) Renew her FP for 6 months or apply for Residence Card ?
2) I have downloaded EEA(FM) form we're happy to proceed with this and read that it takes up to 6 months to proceed. We are regularly travelling to France to visit family and friends and I understand that we can ask to get her passport back in between. However how can she enter back in UK after the FP is expired ? Any evidence to show at the border she applied for RC ?
Thanks
Olivier
Apply for residence card, now.
Present marriage certificate and evidence that your are a qualified person (e.g. are working) to the British immigration officer at the transposed border controls in France. She should then get an EEA Regulations stamp in her passport. Once she's got this 'wet ink stamp' in her passport, she should also be able to fly back.
The certificate of application, which she will get 'immediately' she has applied (4 to 6 weeks later), has no legal standing for entry to the UK.
Transposed controls refers to the immigration control points for the Eurotunnel, the cross-channel ferries, and the Eurostar. In all of these cases you go through French passport control on the UK side departing, and you go through UK passport control on the French/Belgian side returning, so the controls are 'transposed.' What Richard is referring to is getting a EEA dependent stamp at one of these transposed controls the next time you both come back from France. Once she has that stamp (which acts as an EEA FP) she can travel while the RC application is being processed, to include by air, since she'll then have a valid 'visa' to show at check-in.
This is exactly when she would get the wet ink stamp. If she presented an unexpired FP, she would not get a wet ink stamp.
I've never heard of it being a problem. Indeed, on past form it is likely that the IO will tell your wife to apply for an RC as he applies the wet ink stamp to her passport. The only reason for him not to do so would be if the wet ink stamp were indeed valid indefinitely.