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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
Hi Kam,kam999 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 3:01 pmThank you Maria, for the kind words.
Oneglasseyed, good stuff, you got it. I believe when you said non eu outside uk, you applied for family permit. if so, get ready for the RC battle. That will be fun
AlfaBeta123, did you get your answers or came to any conclusion? you got pretty interesting questions out there.
From my own experience, the family permit is the hard part, your follow up applications i.e. resident card predominantly depends on what you have provided in support of your permit application. I remember how scared I was when i submitted my family permit application, I had 4 large folders with me to prove our relationship , . Nonetheless, present your case with all the relevant supporting documents, living together, joint accounts, some billings on the same address. Most importantly what they see I think is how genuine your relationship is and obviously you exercising treaty rights. there is pretty straight forward documents they are looking for, have a look at the case workers guidance notes for UK residence card, it will be handy at the time of your application. I might would say start piling-up your pay slips or HMRC relevant letters and many other documents but according to your timings it is safe to say that your spouse will go under pre-settled status and as per HO recent guidance, it will be very easy and straight forward procedure. So all your preparations or my/anyone's recommendations might be irrelevant. Therefore, I think wait a month or two after the possession of your spouse' family permit and once HO new system go live submit your application. You know your case better but HO might keep an eye on you because of your success so don't give them any reason to refuse your application again, I totally understand how frustrating it is. Good luck mate.oneglasseyed wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 3:54 pmHi Kam,kam999 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 3:01 pmThank you Maria, for the kind words.
Oneglasseyed, good stuff, you got it. I believe when you said non eu outside uk, you applied for family permit. if so, get ready for the RC battle. That will be fun
AlfaBeta123, did you get your answers or came to any conclusion? you got pretty interesting questions out there.
Yes my wife is non-EU & is currently living outside the EU. Any tips on the RC hurdle ahead? From your experience, what do we need to look out for?
If step daughter is born aboard, she requires PR before she can apply for British citizenship. She has no entitlement to British citizenship if not UK born and there is not automatic retrospective entitlement either.bmrpl wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:09 pmHi All,
On a slightly different note, was anyone applying for PRC for a non-EU spouse and a non EU-step child perhaps?
I'm dual national (EEA & British) since March 2017. My wife's and stepdaughter's RP expire in couple of months time. I was thinking to apply for both of their PRC's and then for my wife's BC straight away. Once we get her British passport sorted, my stepdaughter will be automatically entitled to her British nationality according to the HO website. I need to mention that she will be 16 on November.
So my question is... Do I need to apply for step daughter's PRC at all? I know it's not compulsory to have one to be able to stay legally here in UK and once she's a child of a British person she gets her nationality sorted... Am I thinking correctly? Thank you
CR001 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:24 pmIf step daughter is born aboard, she requires PR before she can apply for British citizenship. She has no entitlement to British citizenship if not UK born and there is not automatic retrospective entitlement either.bmrpl wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:09 pmHi All,
On a slightly different note, was anyone applying for PRC for a non-EU spouse and a non EU-step child perhaps?
I'm dual national (EEA & British) since March 2017. My wife's and stepdaughter's RP expire in couple of months time. I was thinking to apply for both of their PRC's and then for my wife's BC straight away. Once we get her British passport sorted, my stepdaughter will be automatically entitled to her British nationality according to the HO website. I need to mention that she will be 16 on November.
So my question is... Do I need to apply for step daughter's PRC at all? I know it's not compulsory to have one to be able to stay legally here in UK and once she's a child of a British person she gets her nationality sorted... Am I thinking correctly? Thank you
Hi CR001,CR001 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:24 pmIf step daughter is born aboard, she requires PR before she can apply for British citizenship. She has no entitlement to British citizenship if not UK born and there is not automatic retrospective entitlement either.bmrpl wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:09 pmHi All,
On a slightly different note, was anyone applying for PRC for a non-EU spouse and a non EU-step child perhaps?
I'm dual national (EEA & British) since March 2017. My wife's and stepdaughter's RP expire in couple of months time. I was thinking to apply for both of their PRC's and then for my wife's BC straight away. Once we get her British passport sorted, my stepdaughter will be automatically entitled to her British nationality according to the HO website. I need to mention that she will be 16 on November.
So my question is... Do I need to apply for step daughter's PRC at all? I know it's not compulsory to have one to be able to stay legally here in UK and once she's a child of a British person she gets her nationality sorted... Am I thinking correctly? Thank you
1. You should post your questions in the BRITISH CITIZENSHIP sub forum please.oneglasseyed wrote: ↑Wed Oct 10, 2018 11:43 amHi CR001,CR001 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:24 pmIf step daughter is born aboard, she requires PR before she can apply for British citizenship. She has no entitlement to British citizenship if not UK born and there is not automatic retrospective entitlement either.bmrpl wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:09 pmHi All,
On a slightly different note, was anyone applying for PRC for a non-EU spouse and a non EU-step child perhaps?
I'm dual national (EEA & British) since March 2017. My wife's and stepdaughter's RP expire in couple of months time. I was thinking to apply for both of their PRC's and then for my wife's BC straight away. Once we get her British passport sorted, my stepdaughter will be automatically entitled to her British nationality according to the HO website. I need to mention that she will be 16 on November.
So my question is... Do I need to apply for step daughter's PRC at all? I know it's not compulsory to have one to be able to stay legally here in UK and once she's a child of a British person she gets her nationality sorted... Am I thinking correctly? Thank you
Does the same rule apply in the following scenario & do we need a PR before child's BC application?:
- Child born abroad after EU Dad became UK citizen
- Mum non-EU/UK
- Both moving to UK imminently, after EEA FP (hopefully)
Cheers
Thanks for the advice CR001. Will post in the correct sub forum next timeCR001 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 10, 2018 11:47 am1. You should post your questions in the BRITISH CITIZENSHIP sub forum please.oneglasseyed wrote: ↑Wed Oct 10, 2018 11:43 amHi CR001,CR001 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:24 pmIf step daughter is born aboard, she requires PR before she can apply for British citizenship. She has no entitlement to British citizenship if not UK born and there is not automatic retrospective entitlement either.bmrpl wrote: ↑Tue Oct 09, 2018 7:09 pmHi All,
On a slightly different note, was anyone applying for PRC for a non-EU spouse and a non EU-step child perhaps?
I'm dual national (EEA & British) since March 2017. My wife's and stepdaughter's RP expire in couple of months time. I was thinking to apply for both of their PRC's and then for my wife's BC straight away. Once we get her British passport sorted, my stepdaughter will be automatically entitled to her British nationality according to the HO website. I need to mention that she will be 16 on November.
So my question is... Do I need to apply for step daughter's PRC at all? I know it's not compulsory to have one to be able to stay legally here in UK and once she's a child of a British person she gets her nationality sorted... Am I thinking correctly? Thank you
Does the same rule apply in the following scenario & do we need a PR before child's BC application?:
- Child born abroad after EU Dad became UK citizen
- Mum non-EU/UK
- Both moving to UK imminently, after EEA FP (hopefully)
Cheers
2. Children born abroad AFTER a parent has naturalised as British is automatically British by descent.
CR001 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 12, 2018 9:57 amPlease continue in your topic you have started in the EEA Route sub forum.
eea-route-applications/dual-citizenship ... l#p1691321
hi E Li,E Li wrote: ↑Sat Oct 20, 2018 12:20 pmMy husband was born in the UK, his farher is british, mum is dutch.
He is a british citizen and also has Dutch nationalilty.
At the moment he only has Dutch passport, doesn’t have british passport. As he moved to Holland when he was a child and changed his surname.
I’m non-EEA, married to him in 2012.
I got eea family permit in 2013 and eea residence card in 2014.
We are trying to applying EEA PR now. Fill in the application form and memtion he is also british citizen.
Is it our case same as Louse case?
Can we still get EEA PR?
He keeps his PR status regardless of what you do.nehaniran12 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 01, 2018 9:58 amMy husband acquired non-EEA permanent residency in January 2016 and he already received his PR card as well. I became a British citizen on the 31st of October 2018, so does it mean that my husband lost his PR status? He still has not applied for naturalisation yet.
Thank you for your reply. My second nationality is German, which I can keep it because as per German law, I can have dual nationality if I take it before brexit(under European Union rules). I will apply for his settled status as soon as the link opens. Thank you againRichard W wrote: ↑Thu Nov 01, 2018 11:01 pmHe keeps his PR status regardless of what you do.nehaniran12 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 01, 2018 9:58 amMy husband acquired non-EEA permanent residency in January 2016 and he already received his PR card as well. I became a British citizen on the 31st of October 2018, so does it mean that my husband lost his PR status? He still has not applied for naturalisation yet.
He should, however, apply for settled status under the EU settlement scheme as soon as possible.
If you were to lose your EEA nationality as a result of becoming British, his PR status would be meaningful in the UK after Brexit only by the goodwill of the UK government; the exit agreement (if any) would not cover him.
bmrpl wrote: ↑Fri Nov 02, 2018 7:22 amHi,
Do you mind me asking what is the purpose of applying for settlement status if we are already dual citizens?
My wife and step daughter (non EU citizens) applied for PRC last week with intention of getting BC as soon as that will be approved.
I thought having British passports will finish all that visa and home office malarkey
Thank you
Under present plans, yes, PR will remain valid through the transition period - though the Immigration Minister (Caroline Nokes) has recently declared that there won't be a transition period if there is no Brexit agreement. But what would she know? (Not a lot, it seems.) More worryingly, it is beginning to look as though the EU settlement scheme won't be generally available before Brexit.
richiesuk wrote: ↑Fri Nov 02, 2018 1:42 pmDear all,
I am a dual citizen (British, Hungarian obtained British citizenship in 2012) and have a Peruvian wife.
I was living in UK till June (for 12 yrs) and before that we applied for a settlement visa but we made a small mistake with the language exam and we failed. (She did not do the IELTS exam for immigration purposes, but she got the 4.5 average rage score, above the required)
In the meantime I got a job opportunity in Malta from Jul, for 9 months and I took it , we moved to Malta and my wife got a job since August as well, we have our maltese resident cards, so we can prove that we started a genuine life here, not just being here for the Surinder Sighn route. (we thought that will be impossible to do considering brexit is really closeby)
I have just came across this new law and now we would consider moving to UK.
Solicitor weblink removed
does this mean she can get easily the EEA family permit or shall we apply thru Surinder Sighn route?
We would be in Malta at the time of the application.
thanks a lot,
Regards,
Richard