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As a British citizen you are unable to apply for an EEA Family permit for your fiancee to settle in the UK. This would only be possible if you are resident in another EU state.daleuk wrote:Hello All
First let me say I have been reading about EEA / Visas for UK for sometime now, still some things boggle me! I am hoping some can help me with some plain English information. My situation:
Me - British Citizen - Self Employed IT contractor in UK, earning sufficient to support 2 comfortably, have own UK home.
My girlfriend - Ukrainian Citizen (non EEA / EU).
Our intention: We are currently not married, but engaged to be marrried. We wish to move together to the UK, we will either work in UK or elsewhere in Europe (yet undecided), mainly due to my contracts depending upon where they are.
1) As far as I am aware in order for us to both go together to the UK, we should apply for a EEA Family Permit, this can be done at the UK Embassy in Kiev.
1a) Married - just need to show the marriage cert - presumably translated to English.
1b) Unmarried - if we apply as unmarried we must demonstrate we are in a long term OR durable relationship - long term meaning 2 years or more. My question is regarding proving a durable relationship when the relationship is not long term i.e. < 6 months. Is it possible to show this? how?
2) If I was to accept some work, just for example in Munich, Germany. Can both I and my partner travel to and work in Germany?
2a) can we go directly from Kiev to Munich, without first obtaining a residence card in the UK?
Thank you for your help
Dale
Normal UK immigration rules, VAF4A, spouse visa, look on UKVI website - it's all there. Basically you need to have earned £1550 pm for the last 6 months, and it operating via Limited which it sounds like your are, to have your CT600 to hand and CT paid, which generally means being in business for longer than 1 years and nine months...daleuk wrote:Thank you for your reply.
So we cannot apply for an EEA Family Permit? even if we are married?
If not, what is the option of having my wife come to the UK with me?
So what other options do we have?Wanderer wrote: For EEA you need to cut ties with UK, and be married, 6 months is not enough for unmarried partnership, and some EEA states don't even recognise unmarried partners, since local laws do not allow it for local citizens, Germany being one of them as I know through direct experience.
That information is a bit outdated, i.e. can't apply using form eea2 and it is not free (anymore), introduced centre of life tests, etc. In effect, it's much harder to use the SS route to the UKdaleuk wrote:I found this step by step for SS route:
1) go abroad (Ireland or any other EU country); we can fly together and need not to apply for any visas, my spouse can travel with me OR she can 'join the partner', i.e. we can fly separately.
2) apply for a registration certificate in the EU member state (which will prove that you are exercising treaty rights);
3) at the same time your wife applies for an EEA Family Permit/ Schengen visa which should be issued free of charge to your wife under Directive 2004/38EC or an equivalent provision of the Member State you are moving to;
4) once your wife joins you in that other country, you make an application to the UK embassy for an EEA Family Permit (you probably wouldn't even need that, you may travel alongside with marriage certificate);
5) once in the UK, fill out application form EEA2 for FREE and you will use Regulation 9 of the above link I gave you to use the EU route;
6) your wife will get a Residence Card valid for 5 years;
7) after 5 years of continuous residence in the UK (not when the card is issued) she could apply for FREE for a permanent residence card.
I am unclear on:
A) What type of visa must my non eea spouse apply for? I have read she doesn't even need to do so at all and would be admitted. But would she be able to work in the EEA state we choose to reside?
B) Must we both work in the EEA state in order to satisfy the requirements for EU Law EEA family permit? as I understand I must 'exercise my treaty right' in this EEA state. Can I declare self-sufficiency?
Thank you for this, it at least makes the steps clear and easy to follow.Casa wrote:I recommend that you read through the recent guidance for Case Workers on assessing a Surinder Singh application. In particular Stages 3 & 4
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... ns-_v1.pdf
Think OP means the EU member state, Ireland.Casa wrote:You won't be applying for a visa. Your wife will have to apply for a EEA Family Permit before she travels to the UK.
https://www.gov.uk/family-permit/overview
You may well be right Char. I assumed the question referred to travelling to the UK.CR001 wrote:Think OP means the EU member state, Ireland.Casa wrote:You won't be applying for a visa. Your wife will have to apply for a EEA Family Permit before she travels to the UK.
https://www.gov.uk/family-permit/overview
I thought we could not apply for a EEA Family Permit to enter my home country.Casa wrote:You won't be applying for a visa. Your wife will have to apply for a EEA Family Permit before she travels to the UK.
https://www.gov.uk/family-permit/overview
More like 9-12 months, UKVI says 3 months is not enough, and consider flat leases in Germany etc are six month minimum, plus something like 3 months up from (lettor pays agency charges).daleuk wrote:Hi Casa
Oh dear, this all makes me feel so so dumb! Ideally we would go directly to the UK, but to do this we would need to apply follow the UKIV 'family of a settled person' application process, this we do not want to follow if at all possible.
Ok so the only other option is the SS route - essence of this is move together to another Schengen state, 3 months +, it becomes the centre of our life etc etc. Then in this EEA state, apply for Family Permit to UK Embassy.
But I thought in order to follow the above SS route, we would first need to go to a Schengen state and in order to do this my non-eea spouse would need a Schengen visa? i.e. Ukraine -> Schengen
You meet the requirements for the VAF4/FLR(M) route under the UK Immigration Route. Why are you looking at taking the riskier (in terms of certainty regarding Brexit) SS route? It is a case of balancing the urge to save a few thousand pounds versus the uncertainty of Brexit.daleuk wrote:Dale - British Citizen - self employed IT contractor - Software Test Management - have £150k cash savings and additional regular income from 2 x UK rental property.
I agree. Apart from SS being a very risky route now, I imagine that the cost of relocating to another EU state for 6-12 months would be substantial.secret.simon wrote:You meet the requirements for the VAF4/FLR(M) route under the UK Immigration Route. Why are you looking at taking the riskier (in terms of certainty regarding Brexit) SS route? It is a case of balancing the urge to save a few thousand pounds versus the uncertainty of Brexit.daleuk wrote:Dale - British Citizen - self employed IT contractor - Software Test Management - have £150k cash savings and additional regular income from 2 x UK rental property.
That ^daleuk wrote: ↑Mon Feb 13, 2017 1:19 pmI had read about the "family of a settled person" but the route appeared to be extremely restrictive and in my opinion quite punishing of a UK citizen, the number of steps, 2 x English tests (her English is proficient), TB test and all payments involved. We ruled it out as a option, to spend upwards of £6-8k on paperwork which could be rejected.