Roxas wrote:Thanks for the reply. I'm still over a year away from having, I think, the ability to be a US citizen (five years in the US). I didn't realise you could have dual citizenship. It opens up another avenue..maybe I will stay and go through with that first. I'm not sure.
I think if you look at
http://www.cis.gov you'll see the naturalisation waiting period is three years if you are married to a US citizen for three years or over. If you've any kind of arrest/criminal record. or any breach of US immigration law on your record, hire an immigration attorney before applying for naturalisation.
As part of the US naturalisation oath you need to renounce foreign allegiances, however this has no effect under British law. However the US does not expect you to hand over your British passport (and if it did, they'd just have to send it back to the British Embassy as it's UK government property). Lots of UK people become US citizens with no problem. This is a good resource:
http://www.richw.org/dualcit
As for the basic sponsorship of my wife will they allow my income to be nil...the last thing I want to be doing is messing about over here on my own trying to get a job before submitting the forms.
Others who have sponsored spouses will know more - but as far as I'm aware you can sponsor your spouse while still being in the US - you don't need to move to the UK first.
Also - you need to know that your spouse must get entry clearance before leaving the US - she *cannot* arrive in the UK as a tourist if she wants to stay as a spouse.
Did she have indefinite leave to remain (ILR)when she was in the UK, or just a spouse visa? If she had ILR then maybe she could apply as a returning resident rather than as a spouse. but it's a grey area as to whether a British citizen spouse would be enough to waive the 2 year absence rule. There's also information on returning residents entry clearance at
http://www.ukvisas.gov.uk
One final point. As you've been married over 4 years she ought to get Indefinite Leave to Enter immediately if she applies as a spouse. This means she will be a UK permanent resident immediately upon entering the UK. After 3 years she will be able to apply for British citizenship.