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Hi there,exegete wrote: ↑Thu Nov 10, 2016 2:46 pmFor those lurkers who are trawling these forums in search of recent practical guidance for non-EEA applicants, here are a few things I learned during the application process. I applied for a residence card as an extended family member (unmarried partner) of an EEA national having cohabited for many years.
Obviously none of the above takes into account your personal circumstances or the merits of your own application. YMMV. Good luck.
- The process is slow. The six month timeframe for making a decision, although mandatory, is treated by the Home Office as a service standard. You should not expect your application to be decided any sooner than six months from the date they received your application. You can determine the date of receipt by sending your documents by special delivery and tracking delivery on the Royal Mail website. It's not possible to speak to anyone about the progress of your application until the six month timeframe has expired. (The people who answer calls to the hotline do not have access to personal information and will not initiate a callback to you from a case manager until the six months has expired.)
- It is possible to have your passport returned to you and to travel outside the UK/EU while your application is being considered. They do not need to retain your passport to determine your application. The residence card itself is a physical biometric card.
- If you have a family permit that has not expired, travelling is easy. You should use the EU lane when returning to the UK and you don't need to complete an arrival card.
- If your family permit expires during the application process, and you leave the UK, expect to encounter difficulties upon re-entering the UK when you show your passport (and expired family permit) to the border official. A certificate of application with work rights is not enough to be waved through. You need to complete an arrival card. You may be detained for 20-30 minutes while the records pertaining to your application are reviewed. You may be asked to explain why your travel was "urgent" or otherwise involved exceptional circumstances. It is not a pleasant experience, and for EFMs, admission is ultimately discretionary. If you have the time and the money to do so, the easiest way to avoid these difficulties is to apply for (another) family permit while you are outside the UK, and pay for priority service (generally about five working days).
- Some border officials do not know the current policy and practice of the Home Office. For example, on two occasions, I was told by different border officials that the return of my passport to me by the Home Office meant that my application had probably been cancelled. They had no knowledge of (or any interest in learning about) the return of documents procedure. On a third occasion, I was told that the processing of my application had been suspended upon my passport being returned to me, and that I needed to re-submit my passport to the Home Office before my application could be determined. All of that advice was wrong. I didn't need to do anything.
Hi,Pattysmith wrote: ↑Wed Sep 20, 2017 3:42 pmHi there,exegete wrote: ↑Thu Nov 10, 2016 2:46 pmFor those lurkers who are trawling these forums in search of recent practical guidance for non-EEA applicants, here are a few things I learned during the application process. I applied for a residence card as an extended family member (unmarried partner) of an EEA national having cohabited for many years.
Obviously none of the above takes into account your personal circumstances or the merits of your own application. YMMV. Good luck.
- The process is slow. The six month timeframe for making a decision, although mandatory, is treated by the Home Office as a service standard. You should not expect your application to be decided any sooner than six months from the date they received your application. You can determine the date of receipt by sending your documents by special delivery and tracking delivery on the Royal Mail website. It's not possible to speak to anyone about the progress of your application until the six month timeframe has expired. (The people who answer calls to the hotline do not have access to personal information and will not initiate a callback to you from a case manager until the six months has expired.)
- It is possible to have your passport returned to you and to travel outside the UK/EU while your application is being considered. They do not need to retain your passport to determine your application. The residence card itself is a physical biometric card.
- If you have a family permit that has not expired, travelling is easy. You should use the EU lane when returning to the UK and you don't need to complete an arrival card.
- If your family permit expires during the application process, and you leave the UK, expect to encounter difficulties upon re-entering the UK when you show your passport (and expired family permit) to the border official. A certificate of application with work rights is not enough to be waved through. You need to complete an arrival card. You may be detained for 20-30 minutes while the records pertaining to your application are reviewed. You may be asked to explain why your travel was "urgent" or otherwise involved exceptional circumstances. It is not a pleasant experience, and for EFMs, admission is ultimately discretionary. If you have the time and the money to do so, the easiest way to avoid these difficulties is to apply for (another) family permit while you are outside the UK, and pay for priority service (generally about five working days).
- Some border officials do not know the current policy and practice of the Home Office. For example, on two occasions, I was told by different border officials that the return of my passport to me by the Home Office meant that my application had probably been cancelled. They had no knowledge of (or any interest in learning about) the return of documents procedure. On a third occasion, I was told that the processing of my application had been suspended upon my passport being returned to me, and that I needed to re-submit my passport to the Home Office before my application could be determined. All of that advice was wrong. I didn't need to do anything.
Realise this message is a bit late but we've been advised by UKVI that my unmarried partner (he is non-eea applying for residence card, has valid family permit expiring 10 Dec, I am Irish national) is unable to request his passport back before a decision is made. Can you please confirm how you know you're able to make the request? Timeline is below so we know that we cannot request the documents back until we get at least biometric and/or CoA, but we have urgent December travel So must be able to get passports back before then.
Help gratefully appreciated!
Application received by HO: 1/09/2017
Payment taken: 5/09/2017
Still waiting for biom letter etc
Thanks!
I'd appreciate any input from other experienced / experts on this topic. We are obviously anxious, as we'll have been together for 4 years by the time we expect an answer back from the Home Office -- so if they reject it, we'll have to pick up sticks and move out of the UK (i.e. the decision would affect my ability to exercise my EEA rights)."Further, there is no European Union definition of "durable", so each case must be looked at on its own facts. In JB (EEA Regulation 17 (4) proper approach) Ivory Coast 2008 UK AIP00062, the Tribunal held that national law must not seek to define community law terms, and it would be wrong to equate this concept of "durability" with living together in a relationship akin to marriage which has subsisted for two years or more. A relationship may further be durable whether it has entailed cohabitation (Dauhoo EEA Regulation 8(2) Mauritius [2012] UK 79 (IAC) a [19])."
Our solicitor has also stated it is okay that we do not have utility bills or original mail that has both of our names on it, from the earlier part of our two years of cohabitation. Instead, we have a letter from the landlord stating when we had been living together, and from many other people we knew in casual and professional capacities. These letters come with their passport and original signature in ink.While it is understood that the Home Office intermittently applied a rule of thumb of two years' cohabitation when assessing whether the partner of an EEA national is indeed in a durable relationship with the EEA national, the present guidance titled "Extended Family Members" recognizes that if there is less than two years' evidence, the decision maker can still accept that there was evidence that their relationship is durable.
Further, there is no European Union definition of "durable", so each case must be looked at on its own facts. In JB (EEA Regulation 17 (4) proper approach) Ivory Coast 2008 UK AIP00062, the Tribunal held that national law must not seek to define community law terms, and it would be wrong to equate this concept of "durability" with living together in a relationship akin to marriage which has subsisted for two years or more. A relationship may further be durable whether it has entailed cohabitation (Dauhoo EEA Regulation 8(2) Mauritius [2012] UK 79 (IAC) a [19]).
I believe the individual advising you, may be expressing a view based on his personal experience.kovacsma wrote: ↑Sun Oct 15, 2017 10:46 pmWhat really gets me is that this wisdom you're providing seems to suggest the HO completely ignores its own guidance documents (https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... -04_KP.pdf). Under the un-married partner section, it explicitly covers the case where the couple does not have utility bills / joint tenancy agreement, and it advises the same as our solicitor. But as I said, I give credit to your anecdotal experience/wisdom too - - and you're saying this is all bollocks?
Depressing and nerve racking, see?
Yes please.
29.06.17- application sent
From my knowledge, what you have mentioned abouve is correct. You will do the application with her as the QP and add yourself, at least that is how the online application works. Yes, two x £65.Piet wrote: ↑Sun Oct 22, 2017 10:16 pmHi everyone,
Apologies if this is a really stupid question, but this whole application process has me stressed out and I want to make sure I am following the right path here.
I'm currently here on Tier 4 Student Visa, but my wife has a Dutch paspport, so I plan to go the EEA FM Residence Card route.
Is this the correct link to apply at https://visas-immigration.service.gov.uk/product/eea-qp ?
And do I apply in my spouse's name with myself added as a family member (i.e. EEA QP application for her with me added), and pay £130 (£65 x 2)? Or is there somewhere where I can apply only for myself only (and just add her details without the QP application)?
Thanks!