babyhalloween2 wrote: ↑Mon Feb 14, 2022 9:54 am
Hi everyone, hope you had a good weekend.
I've recently received my FBR certificate and have been going through the process to get my Passport application ready.
I have my birth and FBR certificates, and relevant proofs of name/address. I can get someone I know to certify my driver's license. However, the only thing I'm not clear on is sending my original (GBR) passport... I have travel booked in April and I'm not confident I'd get the GBR passport back in time if I sent it with my Irish application. So I could either a) send a certified passport copy or b) wait until after my travel in April to send my application off. Does anyone have any experience with this? I've tried waiting for the webchat agents but no luck yet...
Hi, I got my passport at Christmas after ~10 weeks with no complications. I sent my original GB passport and it was returned promptly shortly after the passport arrived.
I think you would be right to not expect your passport back much before May.
The regulations I've read do say they would accept a certified copy of drivers licence. No official mention of accepting a certified copy of passport I could see (though some say they did this and it was accepted).
The form I read said documents required for a 1st Time Adult Applicant are:
-Original Long Form Birth Certificate.
-Original Civil Marriage Certificate (if applicable).
-Proof of entitlement to Irish citizenship if born abroad.
-Photo Identification: e.g. Drivers licence (a certified copy of your driver’s licence will suffice if certified by the same person who witnessed your application form), Public Services Card, college identification,passport from another country.
-Proof of Name: such as payslips, tax documents, college registration, social welfare receipts etc.
-Proof of Address: such as utility bills, bank statements, government correspondence etc.
I was wary of sending my original passport but had no problem in the end.
I thought it would reduce the chance of any issues with a copy/certification.