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I did read somewhere that if you have been working in the UK for one year than you can use NHS, this will cover time when you was studying.tomydza wrote:Hi
I am an EEA citizen. I need some help as I was going to apply for naturalisation but a lady at my local nationality checking service told me that because I was a student I should have a private medical insurance. Is that true?
My situation:
2005 - wroker
2006 - worker
2007 - 2010 - student
2011 - worker
What she said is that I cannot claim the time when I was a student because I did not have a private health insurance .
Can anyone help?
Thank you
Is this correct? I've spent hours checking the forum for information on this matter but unfortunately I haven't been able to find confirmation. I'd very grateful if anyone could confirm or definitively dismiss this.I did read somewhere that if you have been working in the UK for one year than you can use NHS, this will cover time when you was studying.
I`m pretty sure that was on this forum but I can`t provide any links.
Hi Jambo, thanks for replying.Jambo wrote:Are you an EEA national or a family member?
If EEA natioanl, did you apply for Residence Certificate as a student? The UKBA will waive the requirement for CSI when applying for PR if you originally had a Residence Certificate as a student.
Have you got EHIC card from another member state?
I'm not aware of any other relaxation with regards to CSI.
The Registration Certificate is not relevant to CSI. The HO is waiving the requirement for CSI if you were registered as a student before June 2010. For that you have had to apply for a certificate as a student. See more details in the last two pages here.alisha_z wrote:I was not aware of that certificate (I assume you mean the registration certificate for EEA nationals discussed here http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/eucit ... nationals/). To be honest, I can't see how this document is relevant for sickness cover purposes as it is (a) optional and (b) does not mean that you have insurance of any kind either in the UK or in country of origin. Are you sure about this?
From the beginning of the period as a student.EHIC card should be dated from the beginning of qualifying period, is that right?
That's very encouraging! Would it be a good idea to call ukba up and get it confirmed? My partner and I would hate to have to pay the naturalisation fee only to get rejected and then have to try a different route. Also, my partner is quite concerned that if she has her application rejected she might be requested to leave the country as per this case here http://www.immigrationboards.com/viewto ... hlight=csi (which, admittedly, is about EEA2, not BC).Jambo wrote: Although before 2006, being a student (EEA national) did not lead to Permanent Residence, the UKBA are likely to treat her years under the current rules and not the old ones so if she can prove she was a student during those years, I believe it should be OK. I don't think the UKBA will be asking for CSI for that period.
We have tenancy agreements to show -- would that be sufficient, do you think?She will also need to show that since obtaining PR status, she did not leave the UK for more than 2 years otherwise she would have lost her PR status.
No plans to go into politics, but the EU seems to be in turmoil right now -- free movement across member states may not be here forever!BTW - Why to go through all the hassle? BC is not cheap and is not really giving you much more (unless you plan to go into politics....).
Definitely worth giving them a call. Just be prepared that they might not know the answer straight away as this is not a typical question and it requires knowledge of the regulations in place before 2006. You can also try and contact them by email and get a hard copy proof.That's very encouraging! Would it be a good idea to call ukba up and get it confirmed? My partner and I would hate to have to pay the naturalisation fee only to get rejected and then have to try a different route.
EEA nationals are not requested to leave the UK (unless they are committing serious crimes). Worse case, they ask for more documents (as was in the case you quoted, they were asked either to leave or to re-apply with more documents. This is not a removal).Also, my partner is quite concerned that if she has her application rejected she might be requested to leave the country as per this case here http://www.immigrationboards.com/viewto ... hlight=csi (which, admittedly, is about EEA2, not BC).
Good enough.We have tenancy agreements to show -- would that be sufficient, do you think?