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You can apply for your passport and then your family can apply for spouse/child settlement visas on FLR(M) while they are in the UK. There is NO requirement for them to leave the UK to do this. Combined income can be used too.Mrstomojnr wrote:My question then is can I apply for my passport here in uk now that I meet the financial requirements and have them both switch visas to family dependents or do they and I need to go back to South Africa to do all of this?
No, Brexit will affect mainly the EU migrants route. You are on the UK immigration route whether on ancestry or spouse visa.Mrstomojnr wrote:Will brexit effect any non eu immigration laws?
On a point of interest, were your parents married at the time of your birth? Were you born before 1983?Mrstomojnr wrote: ↑Sat Apr 01, 2017 1:53 pmI have right to British citizenship due to my father being a UK born citizen.
If you apply for get British citizenship, your dependents will be unable to apply for ILR based on their ancestry dependent visas as you are not applying for ILR. Their ability to apply is wholly based on your applying for ILR. They cannot apply independently for ILR based on 5 years ancestry visa.Mrstomojnr wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2019 7:58 amHi Char
Sorry me again
Regarding above topic again is it compulsory for me to apply for IRL if I can apply for BC? Would I not be able to apply for BC the same time we apply for hubby and son IRL?
Was born 1988 out of wedlocksecret.simon wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2019 9:15 amOn a point of interest, were your parents married at the time of your birth? Were you born before 1983?Mrstomojnr wrote: ↑Sat Apr 01, 2017 1:53 pmI have right to British citizenship due to my father being a UK born citizen.
Thanks CharCR001 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2019 9:58 amIf you apply for get British citizenship, your dependents will be unable to apply for ILR based on their ancestry dependent visas as you are not applying for ILR. Their ability to apply is wholly based on your applying for ILR. They cannot apply independently for ILR based on 5 years ancestry visa.Mrstomojnr wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2019 7:58 amHi Char
Sorry me again
Regarding above topic again is it compulsory for me to apply for IRL if I can apply for BC? Would I not be able to apply for BC the same time we apply for hubby and son IRL?
They would likely have to switch to spouse/child visa, resetting their 5 year clock for ILR to zero and a new path, 2 x 2.5 year visas.
So i will need to apply first then once I have it then apply for my son?CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2019 6:51 amYou can only apply for your son after you have become British.
Your husband will have to switch to FLR M and meet the English and financial requirements.
Note also, crucially, that IHS has doubled and will be £1000 for a 2.5 year spouse visa plus the visa fee if £1033.
CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2019 6:26 pmMy understanding is that your citizenship registration is not retrospective, you are only British from the date you attend your ceremony following your form UKF application. So the three years already here might not be relevant to your sons registration as you were not British for that period.ok thanks for making this clear
Your hubby and son should switch visas once you are British. The financial requitemtn for them will be £22,400pa.i can meet this alone to support
Unlikely you will get an Ihs refund for what you have paid already.
And crucially, you were not a British citizen by descent at the time of the birth of your child, which is also a requirement for Section 3(5) registration, which is an entitlement (i.e. cannot be refused).CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 07, 2019 6:26 pmMy understanding is that your citizenship registration is not retrospective, you are only British from the date you attend your ceremony following your form UKF application. So the three years already here might not be relevant to your sons registration as you were not British for that period.
I would suggest applying for your child's application after you have successfully registered as a British citizen.Page 18 of the Registration as a British citizen - children guidance wrote:Children born to a parent registered under section 4C, 4G, 4H, 4I of the British Nationality Act 1981
Section 4C of the British Nationality Act 1981 allows those born abroad before 1 January 1983 to British mothers to be registered as a British citizen. Sections 4G, 4H and 4I are registration provisions for those born before 1 July 2006 who would have become British automatically if their parents had been married. Any child born outside of the UK after the parent who is a British citizen otherwise than by descent will be a British citizen under section 2(1) .
You must normally register a child if:
• the child was born before the parent registered under one of the above sections
• the child would be a British citizen or have an entitlement to be registered under section 3(2) or 3(5)
• where necessary both parents consent to the registration or any objections by the non applying parent are ill founded
• there is no reason to refuse on character grounds