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As an Irish citizen, you have the right to move to any other EU country (including the UK) for 90 days with no preconditions. You do not need to be working. You do not need to show how much money you have. You do not need to have a place to live. You do NOT need to be exercising treaty rights in the first 90 days.happytree wrote::D Thanks for the positive replies. The thing is we are applying now from India and i think it's different if you're applying from and EEA country because then you can prove you're excercising treaty rights by moving to the UK and also your spouse already has permission to be in europe. However, i'm already settled here. Also do you know what's the minimum number of hours you have to work to qualify? :?:
Hi,Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:As an Irish citizen, you have the right to move to any other EU country (including the UK) for 90 days with no preconditions. You do not need to be working. You do not need to show how much money you have. You do not need to have a place to live. You do NOT need to be exercising treaty rights in the first 90 days.happytree wrote:Thanks for the positive replies. The thing is we are applying now from India and i think it's different if you're applying from and EEA country because then you can prove you're excercising treaty rights by moving to the UK and also your spouse already has permission to be in europe. However, i'm already settled here. Also do you know what's the minimum number of hours you have to work to qualify?
If you want to stay for MORE than 90 days, then you need to be working or otherwise exercising treaty rights.
There is no minimum number of hours you have to work. For example, you could get a 20 hour per week job at McDonalds. It just has to be a real and productive job.
Hi, I am personally aware of 3 cases where the application was outside the EU/EEA, one from the USA, and 2 from North Africa. All were successful. the 3rd one, actually collected his passport with EEA/fp this morning.happytree wrote:Thanks for the positive replies. The thing is we are applying now from India and i think it's different if you're applying from and EEA country because then you can prove you're excercising treaty rights by moving to the UK and also your spouse already has permission to be in europe. However, i'm already settled here. Also do you know what's the minimum number of hours you have to work to qualify?
See also EEA or UK Spousal visa?MelC wrote:Hi,
when a british citizen uses their irish citzenship for thier 3rd country spouse to benefit from the EEA/fp, and said british citizen has NOT moved, in fact they remain in the same home and job as they have done for some time as a british citizen (in northern Ireland) ~ do they require a Residence Certificate to prove that they are exercising their treaty right?
as without that, and any other documents to show that from a specific date they are using thier Irish citizenship/nationality, are they not under british domestic law? I know the UKBA are reviewing this, and presume that no specific answer will come from them until the conclusion of the McCarthy case in 2011, and current legislation (according to Clayton) states that the british national/citizen is relying on thier british residence and therefore would NOT be exercisig a treaty right.
I wonder what your thoughts/experiences are on this?
regards