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immaculatestuff wrote:Hi
I am in the middle of prepairing my EEA 4 application, on the basis of retained rights of residence. We were married for over 4 years and we lived in the U.K throughout.
Now looking at the EEA4 application I see, they want to know what my wife had been doing throughout this period. I have almost all the documents i.e. bank statements, bills, votes etc.
During these 5 years my wife was self employed, student as well as employed. I was just wondering if she was required to have a comprehensive sickness insurance while she was exercising her treaty rights in certain capacities e.g. student or self employed?
She did have some sort of Health Insurance card from her own country, how would I know if that would be acceptable? Please Advise
bobobo wrote:For her time as Employed and Self Employed she will be fine if you can show payslips, accountants letters to show Tax and NI was paid.
As a student she might need Insurnace, How long was her insurance valid from her home country?, is the document in english? what level of protection did she have?
immaculatestuff wrote:Hi
I am in the middle of prepairing my EEA 4 application, on the basis of retained rights of residence. We were married for over 4 years and we lived in the U.K throughout.
Now looking at the EEA4 application I see, they want to know what my wife had been doing throughout this period. I have almost all the documents i.e. bank statements, bills, votes etc.
During these 5 years my wife was self employed, student as well as employed. I was just wondering if she was required to have a comprehensive sickness insurance while she was exercising her treaty rights in certain capacities e.g. student or self employed?
She did have some sort of Health Insurance card from her own country, how would I know if that would be acceptable? Please Advise
Punjab wrote:all i know mate is that once your eu/eea partner stop exercising her treaty rights the clock for pr is reset. there is a 3 yr rule something.. but i still belive you need to show her csi or insurance.. unless you have her ehic card issue from non uk
immaculatestuff wrote:Well she was studying in the U.K for a year, not sure if that alone translates into exercising treaty rights. As per our understanding she was exercising her treaty right.
I am just not sure about the type of insurance she had and if I will be able to access that information from her.
Punjab wrote:all i know mate is that once your eu/eea partner stop exercising her treaty rights the clock for pr is reset. there is a 3 yr rule something.. but i still belive you need to show her csi or insurance.. unless you have her ehic card issue from non uk
bobobo wrote:Ideally she shoudl have had Comprehensive Insurance Cover in the UK which would offer a decent amount of cover incase she needed medical attention, especially as she was a student.
Not Sure if the Insurance for her country would be any good at all
immaculatestuff wrote:Well she was studying in the U.K for a year, not sure if that alone translates into exercising treaty rights. As per our understanding she was exercising her treaty right.
I am just not sure about the type of insurance she had and if I will be able to access that information from her.
Punjab wrote:all i know mate is that once your eu/eea partner stop exercising her treaty rights the clock for pr is reset. there is a 3 yr rule something.. but i still belive you need to show her csi or insurance.. unless you have her ehic card issue from non uk
Obie wrote:You cannot use form EEA4 as you have yet to reside 5 years in the UK in accordance with the EEA regulations. Except if the marriage lasted for 5 years. Over 4 years of marriage does not equate to 5 years of marriage.
What was your wife doing in the period leading to the divorce being finalised?
Was she Self Employed or a Student, and have you got evidence of this?
If she was a student, or self employed, then you will need comprehensive sickness insurance.
If she was working and she was made redundant, that may be fine, provided you can supply evidence to that effect.
Obie wrote:If the time of her studies immediately precedes the decree absolute, then you certainly require a CSI, except if she was involuntarily unemployed or she is someone who has secured the right of permanent residence in the UK
I believe all of the above will need to be properly documented, and submitted to the HO for a successful PR application. If you had been in UK under EEA regulations for 5 years.
Was She a full time student or did she work part time during the student period?batakooji wrote:Hello,
Need your opinion if you can help Plz,
I am on 5 year Non-EEA family member residency. My spouse is a holder of BC and another EU passports but we choose the route of EEA when we joined. My question is, throughout the 5 years my spouse had been employed (which is fine) and student ( which we did not know that we should have a health insurance for it). Now I applied for naturalization having I spent 5 years in the UK, Would the fact that my spouse was student without insurance give them the right to decline the application. Thanks for your help