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Actually - that's not true:wunder wrote:No, you can only apply in February 2011.
The requirement is to be a UK resident for at least 5 years prior to the day of application (including the full day exactly 5 years ago). People on visitor visas are not residents.
So - you only have to be IN the UK at the beginning of the residency period.that the applicant was in the United Kingdom at the beginning of the period of five years ending with the date of the application, and that the number of days on which he was absent from the United Kingdom in that period does not exceed 450;
My wife successfully applied for her citizenship using this rule and using the fact she was in the country, on a tourist visa for a period of just 6 days as her qualifying date.2.3 Physical presence here is normally sufficient for the purpose of the
Act. The applicant does not have to have been ordinarily resident or domiciled here. Normally, an applicant is to be regarded as present in the United Kingdom unless physically absent; but in certain circumstances, the Act requires periods of physical presence to be treated as absences (see paragraph 9 below).
So - for the OP - you can only apply in Feb 2011.(c)that he was not at any time in the period of twelve months so ending subject under the immigration laws to any restriction on the period for which he might remain in the United Kingdom;
While the situation he is in is forcing him to be a resident for five years, the statement:wunder wrote:In his case it is true - it is exactly the same situation as I'm experiencing myself: 4 years of being a resident (not a visitor) for ILR + 12 months after getting ILR.MPH80 wrote:Actually - that's not true
is not true - if you can get ILR prior to the 4 year marker then you can do it in less.The requirement is to be a UK resident for at least 5 years prior to the day of application (including the full day exactly 5 years ago)
Four years for people covered by HSMP JR, andStandard requirements -> Residential period wrote:been resident in the UK for at least five years (this is known as the residential qualifying period);
requirements for spouse / partners -> residential requirements wrote:have been resident in the United Kingdom for at least three years (this is known as the residential qualifying period)
If the couple are legally divorced (decree absolute), then an applicant cannot claim eligibility to naturalisation in 3 years time. The applicant must complete the 5 year residency period to be eligible for naturalisationMPH80 wrote:you might get ILR as a spouse (after 2 years) and then divorce. You could still obtain citizenship a year later (after 3) if you were here as a visitor 5 years earlier.
No.tonytee wrote: Is it possible to apply for nationalization before February 2011.
However, the law says something different - see my post above. Particularly about the requirements of the residential qualifying period.sushdmehta wrote:Four years for people covered by HSMP JR, andStandard requirements -> Residential period wrote:been resident in the UK for at least five years (this is known as the residential qualifying period);requirements for spouse / partners -> residential requirements wrote:have been resident in the United Kingdom for at least three years (this is known as the residential qualifying period)
The entire point being that when you read what you have to do to meet the residence requirements - you find that you don't actually have to be resident for the period - merely be legally in the country at the start and not breach the days out of country rules (which might be tough!)If the couple are legally divorced (decree absolute), then an applicant cannot claim eligibility to naturalisation in 3 years time. The applicant must complete the 5 year residency period to be eligible for naturalisationMPH80 wrote:you might get ILR as a spouse (after 2 years) and then divorce. You could still obtain citizenship a year later (after 3) if you were here as a visitor 5 years earlier.
See also 18.2.2 Naturalisation under section 6 (2).
Ok - yes - I'd accept that interpretation of the phrasing.Therefore, to state the residential qualifying period requirement is not true isn't accurate and perhaps as a result of misinterpreting the requirement.