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friendinneed wrote:You are required to be resident (ie this is the country you are living in, your main home is etc) for 5 years which is requirement one. Requirement two is that you havent been outside of the country for more than 90 days in any one year.
You have to meet both requirements independently and simply because you go on a 60 day holiday doesnt mean you cease to be resident in the UK, your just not physical present for that period.
In short, you cant apply 90 days early.
here, http://www.uscis.gov/files/form/n-400instr.pdffriendinneed wrote:Ultimately it is up to you and you can have the argument with UKBA if you want.
Residency, which is what the requirement is, does not equate to being in the country 100% of the time. I dont suddenly become a resident of Dubai when I went on holiday last month even if i was physically in that country rather than here. The requirement is 5 years residency and not 5 years present therefore lack of holiday doesnt reduce the requirement and nor can you count time spent in the UK on visitor visas as during this time you arent legally resident even if you are physically present.
They dont have the "same" requirement, it happens that they both have a requirement of 5 years.illmatha wrote:Americans have the SAME 5 year residency requirement. BUT they made it explicit and said "If you are applying based on five years as a lawful permanent resident..., you may apply for naturalization up to 90 days before you meet the ''continuous residence'' requirement."
I said "...the same '5 year' residency requirement." The amount of time is what I was talking about. I didn't say every condition is same.friendinneed wrote:They dont have the "same" requirement, it happens that they both have a requirement of 5 years.illmatha wrote:Americans have the SAME 5 year residency requirement. BUT they made it explicit and said "If you are applying based on five years as a lawful permanent resident..., you may apply for naturalization up to 90 days before you meet the ''continuous residence'' requirement."
The US law explicitly says you can apply 90 days before you are eligible (and doesnt say you can deduct non-holiday off so can apply 180 days early).
The UK law explicitly says that you must be eligible on the day the Home Office receive the application.
For UK, you therefore can technically send the form a day or two early, depending which postal class you use, but still must be a completed 5 years residency at the point UKBA receive it.
What UKBA wants to see is the dates not the days as such. They allow you to have time out of the country but they determine your 5 years residency I believe like this if you arrived on 1 May 2005, on 1 May 2009 you will be eligible to apply for ILR and say if your ILR is granted on 1 June 2009 you can apply for citizenship 1 June 2010. Plus they look for how long you have been absent between those dates and this is when that 90 day allowance kicks in. If one follows your logics (365-90) and never leaves the country within 5 years then one can apply for ILR almost a year and a half earlier because he spent necessary amount of days in the country. Unfortunately it doesn’t work this way.illmatha wrote:I said "...the same '5 year' residency requirement." The amount of time is what I was talking about. I didn't say every condition is same.friendinneed wrote:They dont have the "same" requirement, it happens that they both have a requirement of 5 years.illmatha wrote:Americans have the SAME 5 year residency requirement. BUT they made it explicit and said "If you are applying based on five years as a lawful permanent resident..., you may apply for naturalization up to 90 days before you meet the ''continuous residence'' requirement."
The US law explicitly says you can apply 90 days before you are eligible (and doesnt say you can deduct non-holiday off so can apply 180 days early).
The UK law explicitly says that you must be eligible on the day the Home Office receive the application.
For UK, you therefore can technically send the form a day or two early, depending which postal class you use, but still must be a completed 5 years residency at the point UKBA receive it.
Yes. The UK law explicitly says "you must be eligible on the day the Home Office receive the application, BUT, it also says 'with 450 days absent in 5 year from the UK'"
What UKBA want to see is that a person has STAYED in the UK for at least 365-90 day in 1 FULL YEAR - do you agree? - (or in other words, the ACTUAL (or effective) residency in the UK = stay in the UK) and thus one must stay at least 5 year WITH 450 days absent from the UK to qualify for citizenship (since the ACTUAL (or effective) residency in the UK = stay in the UK). BUT IF a person is continuously staying in the UK for "5 year minus 90 days" then, logically, he has satisfied the residency requirement. After this time even if he goes anywhere at all, he WILL qualify for citizenship anyway and a person with a good intellect would not reject such applicant.
Don't you think so?
Plus they take 6 months to process an application which is 180 day!
US immigration law is not particularly relevant because it is phrased differently.Paragraph 1 of Schedule 1 of the British Nationality Act 1981 as currently in force wrote: (1) Subject to paragraph 2, the requirements for naturalisation as a British citizen under section 6(1) are, in the case of any person who applies for it—
(a)the requirements specified in sub-paragraph (2) of this paragraph, or the alternative requirement specified in sub-paragraph (3) of this paragraph; and
(b)that he is of good character; and
(c)that he has a sufficient knowledge of the English, Welsh or Scottish Gaelic language; and
(ca)that he has sufficient knowledge about life in the United Kingdom; and
(d)that either—
(i)his intentions are such that, in the event of a certificate of naturalisation as a British citizen being granted to him, his home or (if he has more than one) his principal home will be in the United Kingdom; or
(ii)he intends, in the event of such a certificate being granted to him, to enter into, or continue in, Crown service under the government of the United Kingdom, or service under an international organisation of which the United Kingdom or Her Majesty’s government therein is a member, or service in the employment of a company or association established in the United Kingdom.
(2)The requirements referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(a) of this paragraph are—
(a)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; and
(b)that the number of days on which he was absent from the United Kingdom in the period of twelve months so ending does not exceed 90; and
(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; and
(d)that he was not at any time in the period of five years so ending in the United Kingdom in breach of the immigration laws.
(3)The alternative requirement referred to in sub-paragraph (1)(a) of this paragraph is that on the date of the application he is serving outside the United Kingdom in Crown service under the government of the United Kingdom.
illmatha wrote:Can I apply for UK citizenship 90 days before the actual 5 year residency anniversary?
each year i am allowed to be away from the country for 90 days. it means during my final year ( i.e. my 5th year ) if i am absent from the UK FOR ZERO DAYS then I should be allowed to apply for citizenship 90 days earlier, right? because i will meet the "5 year residency" requirement anyway!
essentially, it means for UKBA " 1 year = 1 year minus 90 days ( i.e. 365-90 days ) "
so, im asking, has any1 applied 90 days earlier??
Yes he can. NCS are wrong (ask them to call the HO to verify).Saty wrote:Can someone let me know if a person is Out of UK for 400 days in a single absence but during the qualifying 5 years, the total absence is less than 450, can he apply for naturalization.