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https://www.freemovement.org.uk/uk-immi ... endencies/elpidiovaldez5 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 14, 2020 12:55 pmI am British, living in Jersey with my unmarried partner. We have 2 children and both have British Citizenship. My partner has a Spouse visa, and we are coming up to 5 years living in the island. Jersey is a Crown Dependency, but not part of the UK.
One worry that has troubled me for a long time is whether when she gets ILR in Jersey, it will give her ILR in the UK. I can't find anything clear about this on Jersey or UK websites. Also one year after getting ILR in Jersey, she is entitled to apply for citizenship. Will this be British Citizenship, or some restricted form ?
The immigration rules are kept uniform across the UK and the crown dependencies. ILR granted in Jersey (or the UK) allows you to stay in the United Kingdom and Islands permanently without any restrictions from immigration on your stay and employment.elpidiovaldez5 wrote: ↑Mon Dec 14, 2020 12:55 pmI am British, living in Jersey with my unmarried partner. We have 2 children and both have British Citizenship. My partner has a Spouse visa, and we are coming up to 5 years living in the island. Jersey is a Crown Dependency, but not part of the UK.
One worry that has troubled me for a long time is whether when she gets ILR in Jersey, it will give her ILR in the UK. I can't find anything clear about this on Jersey or UK websites. Also one year after getting ILR in Jersey, she is entitled to apply for citizenship. Will this be British Citizenship, or some restricted form ?
Indeed, keep in mind that the same also applies to each Crown Dependency. An ILR issued by Jersey may not confer the right to reside in Guernsey or Alderney or Sark, let alone the Isle of Man.Schedule 4 of the Immigration Act 1971 explicitly integrates UK immigration law with that of each Crown Dependency. It says that applying for a visa for one of the Crown Dependencies is as if you are applying for a UK visa. But this does not mean that you are being granted a visa for entry or residence in the UK, only that it is being granted by the United Kingdom through the UK’s administrative and legislative processes.
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if you have a visa from one of the Crown Dependencies – you are permitted to subsequently visit the United Kingdom. If you wish to live and work in the UK, however, you would need to apply for a separate UK visa.
If ILR was granted in Jersey, then it’s treated as if ILR was granted in the UK?1(1)Where under the immigration laws of any of the Islands a person is or has been given leave to enter or remain in the island, or is or has been refused leave, this Act shall have effect in relation to him, if he is not [F1a British citizen], as if the leave were leave (of like duration) given under this Act to enter or remain in the United Kingdom, or, as the case may be, as if he had under this Act been refused leave to enter the United Kingdom.