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IT is definitely a huge shortage sector and loads of people with that background get granted jobseeker visa because the economy is rather desperate for that skill set.mak35 wrote:All points duly noted and make perfect sense. thanks for your crucial feedback.
@ALKB@ALKB - I may sound very foolish but I do not speak a word of German and was really hoping that I could land a job in IT/Project management in a company where dual language is accepted.This is where my expertise are. Is it too difficult to make it in the IT job market there?How are you going to address the health insurance situation without a job?
Do you speak any German at all?
So whilst I look for job I was also thinking to set up an internet business in parallel. May be Website development or Seller on Amazon/Ebay. Set up a company to run this internet business on the side and pay my self salary until I find a permanent job. The company would of course have enough capital to invest in the internet business (resources/computer/software) and pay me a salary as an employee.
Does it all sound very fairy tale and have I made it too simple in my head or do you guys see any achievable reality in it?
Parents have 3 months of health insurance from the country of residence. I have EHIC for myself, wife and out daughter. But EHIC is only valid for a short period of time so once I start to get paid from the company then the company can pay Health insurance. I understand the costs of paying insurance through my limited company can cost me a lot
mak35 wrote:Someone threw a spanner in the plan earlier.
I rang up the Residence Permit section of German Embassy UK to ask if my parents are issued with a Tourist Visa would they be able to apply for Residence Permit directly in Germany. The woman on the other side replied NO and they have to go back to home country and apply for 'Family reunification' visa. She said nationalities of certain countries are not issued RC within Germany. Pakistan being one of them (parent's home)
When I insisted that German Immigration website does not state any distinction applied based on nationality she simply said different councils in German may interpret it differently so you can go and try !! like it is not a big deal to move the entire center of your life to a new country just to find out whether this whole thing will work or not.
I've looked up and book an appointment with a German Immigration Lawyer for tomorrow to check for definite. That woman was not very helpful and would say NO to everything ... typical behavior from Embassy!
mak35 wrote:Someone threw a spanner in the plan earlier.
I rang up the Residence Permit section of German Embassy UK to ask if my parents are issued with a Tourist Visa would they be able to apply for Residence Permit directly in Germany. The woman on the other side replied NO and they have to go back to home country and apply for 'Family reunification' visa. She said nationalities of certain countries are not issued RC within Germany. Pakistan being one of them (parent's home)
When I insisted that German Immigration website does not state any distinction applied based on nationality she simply said different councils in German may interpret it differently so you can go and try !! like it is not a big deal to move the entire center of your life to a new country just to find out whether this whole thing will work or not.
I've looked up and book an appointment with a German Immigration Lawyer for tomorrow to check for definite. That woman was not very helpful and would say NO to everything ... typical behavior from Embassy!
I have an uncle in Dussledorf so i was hoping that if I get a flat/house for 5 near him for the first 3 months then it would give me a chance to look for work. When I find something suitable we can come out of the 90 day contract into a new one. How strict are the laws governing accommodation?ALKB wrote:
Have you researched where most of the jobs are for your specific expertise?
Have you researched where in Germany you will go at all?
I have an appointment with the Lawyer next week but she has answered the main question I asked that YES we can apply for RC whilst in Germany with Schengen type C visa. But she does want to discuss the overall situation with me having no prior arrangement of work there.ALKB wrote:
Talking to a German immigration lawyer is a good idea. Just make sure they know that you are dealing with EU and not domestic immigration law. It's quite different.
This is what I found in Gov document. It also goes into details of how Govt is planning to implement these reforms. read more hear ... https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... _ready.pdfALKB wrote:mak35 wrote:Someone threw a spanner in the plan earlier.
I rang up the Residence Permit section of German Embassy UK to ask if my parents are issued with a Tourist Visa would they be able to apply for Residence Permit directly in Germany. The woman on the other side replied NO and they have to go back to home country and apply for 'Family reunification' visa. She said nationalities of certain countries are not issued RC within Germany. Pakistan being one of them (parent's home)
When I insisted that German Immigration website does not state any distinction applied based on nationality she simply said different councils in German may interpret it differently so you can go and try !! like it is not a big deal to move the entire center of your life to a new country just to find out whether this whole thing will work or not.
I've looked up and book an appointment with a German Immigration Lawyer for tomorrow to check for definite. That woman was not very helpful and would say NO to everything ... typical behavior from Embassy!
There are several examples on this forum alone of people arriving on a tourist visa in Germany and then applying successfully for residence card for family member of EU nationals.
I specifically remember one thread - the OP had no problem getting an RC for his mother but had trouble getting one for his brother (extended family member). Both had arrived in Germany on short term Schengen tourist visas.
On the other hand, have you researched what Brexit might mean for your plan or what Camerons 'deal' with the EU might mean for you in case the UK stays in the EU?
I think that's the crucial bit. It doesn't mention parents but that doesn't mean it won't be applied to them...mak35 wrote:This is what I found in Gov document. It also goes into details of how Govt is planning to implement these reforms. read more hear ... https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... _ready.pdfALKB wrote:mak35 wrote:Someone threw a spanner in the plan earlier.
I rang up the Residence Permit section of German Embassy UK to ask if my parents are issued with a Tourist Visa would they be able to apply for Residence Permit directly in Germany. The woman on the other side replied NO and they have to go back to home country and apply for 'Family reunification' visa. She said nationalities of certain countries are not issued RC within Germany. Pakistan being one of them (parent's home)
When I insisted that German Immigration website does not state any distinction applied based on nationality she simply said different councils in German may interpret it differently so you can go and try !! like it is not a big deal to move the entire center of your life to a new country just to find out whether this whole thing will work or not.
I've looked up and book an appointment with a German Immigration Lawyer for tomorrow to check for definite. That woman was not very helpful and would say NO to everything ... typical behavior from Embassy!
There are several examples on this forum alone of people arriving on a tourist visa in Germany and then applying successfully for residence card for family member of EU nationals.
I specifically remember one thread - the OP had no problem getting an RC for his mother but had trouble getting one for his brother (extended family member). Both had arrived in Germany on short term Schengen tourist visas.
On the other hand, have you researched what Brexit might mean for your plan or what Camerons 'deal' with the EU might mean for you in case the UK stays in the EU?
2.119
The agreement we have secured contains a commitment to new legislation, making
important changes, which will help ensure that non-EU nationals will no longer be able to
take advantage of EU law to get around our immigration controls. The European Commission
Declaration makes clear that it will propose new secondary legislation “in order to exclude,
from the scope of free movement rights, third country nationals who had no prior lawful
residence in a Member State before marrying a Union citizen or who marry a Union citizen
only after the Union citizen has established residence in the host Member State”. This means
that non-EU nationals who have been living in the UK illegally will no longer be able to evade
our immigration controls by marrying an EU national. In addition, non-EU nationals who are
married to or who marry EU nationals already living in a host Member State will need to meet
the domestic immigration rules of the first EU country they reside in. In the UK that includes an
income test and English language requirement.
If you are registered as resident in Germany you can work remotely but need to pay taxes, social security contributions and health insurance into the German systems.mak35 wrote:I have an appointment with the Lawyer next week but she has answered the main question I asked that YES we can apply for RC whilst in Germany with Schengen type C visa. But she does want to discuss the overall situation with me having no prior arrangement of work there.ALKB wrote:
Talking to a German immigration lawyer is a good idea. Just make sure they know that you are dealing with EU and not domestic immigration law. It's quite different.
With all the costs to maintain 5 people and sky high rent I was thinking what if I settle the family there and keep working in UK for couple of months until I find a job in Germany. I know this period will not be counted towards the Center of Life tests but at least the family will be in the process of getting the RC based on self-sufficiency. The ultimate aim will be to finally move myself there but its just trying not to lose the source of income until I secure something decent in Germany.
Do you know if I am even allowed to do that ? with non-eu dependents in the host state
90 day contract?mak35 wrote:I have an uncle in Dussledorf so i was hoping that if I get a flat/house for 5 near him for the first 3 months then it would give me a chance to look for work. When I find something suitable we can come out of the 90 day contract into a new one. How strict are the laws governing accommodation?ALKB wrote:
Have you researched where most of the jobs are for your specific expertise?
Have you researched where in Germany you will go at all?
As you rightly mentioned there are very few properties that can house 5 people.In UK, 4 people can easily live in a 2 bedroom flat but every advert I look at in Germany shows max people allowed conditions. How strictly are these applied in reality.
Is there a way to find cheaper accommodation as it seems very expensive on the websites.
Most IT jobs seem to be in Frankfurt, Hamburg or Berlin. so I am concentrating on these areas.
Your dependents can't be sponsored in Germany if you, the Union citizen and sponsor, are not there with them.mak35 wrote:With all the costs to maintain 5 people and sky high rent I was thinking what if I settle the family there and keep working in UK for couple of months until I find a job in Germany. I know this period will not be counted towards the Center of Life tests but at least the family will be in the process of getting the RC based on self-sufficiency. The ultimate aim will be to finally move myself there but its just trying not to lose the source of income until I secure something decent in Germany.
Do you know if I am even allowed to do that ? with non-eu dependents in the host state
ALKB wrote: On the other hand, have you researched what Brexit might mean for your plan or what Camerons 'deal' with the EU might mean for you in case the UK stays in the EU?
mak35 wrote: This is what I found in Gov document. It also goes into details of how Govt is planning to implement these reforms. read more hear ... https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... _ready.pdf
2.119
The agreement we have secured contains a commitment to new legislation, making
important changes, which will help ensure that non-EU nationals will no longer be able to
take advantage of EU law to get around our immigration controls. The European Commission
Declaration makes clear that it will propose new secondary legislation “in order to exclude,
from the scope of free movement rights, third country nationals who had no prior lawful
residence in a Member State before marrying a Union citizen or who marry a Union citizen
only after the Union citizen has established residence in the host Member State”. This means
that non-EU nationals who have been living in the UK illegally will no longer be able to evade
our immigration controls by marrying an EU national. In addition, non-EU nationals who are
married to or who marry EU nationals already living in a host Member State will need to meet
the domestic immigration rules of the first EU country they reside in. In the UK that includes an
income test and English language requirement.
Yeh .. parents are not mentioned and there is nothing that will stop UK to try and implement these changes in the case of parents. EU has also promised to implement these changes as soon as a decision is made by UK to stay in the EU.ALKB wrote: I think that's the crucial bit. It doesn't mention parents but that doesn't mean it won't be applied to them...
ALKB wrote: 90 day contract?
What kind of websites are you looking at?
Have you contacted some employers? German employers are much less hesitant to consider somebody who is not yet in the country than UK employers, especially if the person doesn't need a work permit and is only a short budget airline flight away.mak35 wrote: I just googled it and yes you are right these are all furnished and very expensive. Do you know of any local websites / letting agencies I can look at?
mak35 wrote: I have been sending out CVs but no response yet. I know just sending the CV is not good enough, I will try to call the recruiters too. any suggestions on job websites?
I don't know. Nobody does at this point of time, I imagine.mak35 wrote:
So if I arrive in Germany with parents before 23 June and lets suppose we manage to get RC based on Self-Sufficiency or I find work, how would that apply to us. Because then we will have lawful residence before the secondary legislation kicks in.
Also what does that mean "all non-EU
nationals will have to meet the immigration controls of the first Member State that they enter,
addressing the unfairness of the current situation, in which it is easier for an EU national to
bring a non-EU spouse to the UK than it is for a UK national."
how would the German law be applied to a third country national who is already in the country then?
Letting agencies are less common in Germany and charge the tenant huge fees (often several months rent = Provision).mak35 wrote: I just googled it and yes you are right these are all furnished and very expensive. Do you know of any local websites / letting agencies I can look at?
Are you applying in German standard? Or are you just sending out CV's?mak35 wrote: I have been sending out CVs but no response yet. I know just sending the CV is not good enough, I will try to call the recruiters too. any suggestions on job websites?
Hamza2013 wrote:Hi ALKB,
The comment regarding stopping close relative to UK, there are many detailed discussion happened on this group and no one is aware as what will be the outcome, however the white paper released for new EU rules if UK stays in EU only emphasize on spouses and do not discuss particularly for dependent parents, children etc i.e. if UK stays within EU there will still be free movement but with stricter rules.
In other scenario if UK Brexit then it will take at least 2 years to imply Article 10 and change the rules. Do you have any different information then this? Thanks
We are living in the UK and exercising treaty rights plenty.Hamza2013 wrote:Thanks ALKB,
So it is clear as mud, i strongly believe that if non EU family members are in EU before all these changes, Uk can not build walls over the night to stop their own citizens along with non EU members living with them in another EU countries. I reckon the rules will be tightened but certainly will not stop the existing citizens to re-enter UK else it will be breach of human rights (i am talking about people who are already in EU under EU treaty rights).
Now this is all speculations and no one is sure. If your husband is looking to bring his parents, he can exercise his treaty rights in another EU country with relax rules and bring them over back to his own home EU contry.
ALKB wrote:We are living in the UK and exercising treaty rights plenty.Hamza2013 wrote:Thanks ALKB,
So it is clear as mud, i strongly believe that if non EU family members are in EU before all these changes, Uk can not build walls over the night to stop their own citizens along with non EU members living with them in another EU countries. I reckon the rules will be tightened but certainly will not stop the existing citizens to re-enter UK else it will be breach of human rights (i am talking about people who are already in EU under EU treaty rights).
Now this is all speculations and no one is sure. If your husband is looking to bring his parents, he can exercise his treaty rights in another EU country with relax rules and bring them over back to his own home EU contry.
Thankfully he doesn't have to bring his parents here and neither do they want to move. I am an only child and my parents are getting old, too. Can't and won't take care of two sets at once, especially since my husband has 6 siblings.
Would you not have been better setting up as a Freiberufler?heetdpatel wrote:Do we have any update?
I am trying to do this route now. I setup the limited (GMBH) company in Germany. And now I am going to start trading from August. So please can you confirm if there are any change in rules?
I agree with Wanderer. I have been in Germany since June. My first month of working was through my UK Ltd company and it was a way to starting the process in Germany. Based on that I was able to get German RC for my parents. Then I found a proper contract with a big German company and have been freelancing since mid July. It has only been a month and the initial contract is only until end of September but I am hopeful that it will be extended.Wanderer wrote:Would you not have been better setting up as a Freiberufler?heetdpatel wrote:Do we have any update?
I am trying to do this route now. I setup the limited (GMBH) company in Germany. And now I am going to start trading from August. So please can you confirm if there are any change in rules?
mak35 wrote:I agree with Wanderer. I have been in Germany since June. My first month of working was through my UK Ltd company and it was a way to starting the process in Germany. Based on that I was able to get German RC for my parents. Then I found a proper contract with a big German company and have been freelancing since mid July. It has only been a month and the initial contract is only until end of September but I am hopeful that it will be extended.Wanderer wrote:Would you not have been better setting up as a Freiberufler?heetdpatel wrote:Do we have any update?
I am trying to do this route now. I setup the limited (GMBH) company in Germany. And now I am going to start trading from August. So please can you confirm if there are any change in rules?
If not, I will have to look for something else but my plan is to return to UK end of December. I guess I would have to apply for EEA permit by end of November. I would hopefully be going back after completing 6 months.
Do you guys think its enough?
I have had very limited internet here in Germany due to messing about of some internet companies and have not been in touch with this Brexit a lot. Seems like UK will trigger article 50 start of next year.
Also one more important question that in preparation for going back I have the following now
1. Tenancy agreement with my parents and family member names
2. My parents German RC
3. My wife should receive her RC soon too
4. Our tax numbers
5. Me and my parents "Auskunft über die Steuerliche Identifikationsnummer" - "Information on the Tax Identification Number"
6. Sozialversicherungsausweis - our Social Security numbers
7. Invoices from work
8. Freelance Tax registration number
9. VAT number
10. Contract from German employer
11. My whole family is now insured with German health insurance TK - very expensive due to my freelance work
Things that are in progress
1. Looking for a nursery for my 3 year old daughter. No places in the near by nurseries and they are asking us to come next year!!
2. Gym membership
3. Library membership
4. Start to learn the German language. Really need to do this. Even though I am working for a German employer but they all speak English so I am not having much of a difficulty. But I guess for centre of life its a must.
Anything else you think I should do whilst I am there that can make my case stronger?
Also do I need to declare in UK that I am now a resident of Germany? Do I need to tell the UK Tax authorities? Wanderer / Nojthan can you point me to any threads on this topic please?
Also in my first month from June to mid July I was going back and forth between UK and Germany as I was trying to close operations in UK and start up in Germany. In the mean time we had our baby born in UK too and then my wife and kids moved in the beginning of August. My parents had been with me in Germany since June. Do you think it could cause any issues and be seen as I have not moved my centre of life.
But from the end of July to December I would probably visit UK once to attend a wedding and that would be it.