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It is a new requirement, since end of last year/beginning of this year, whereby an EEA applicant for the privilege of citizenship has to submit a mandatory 'confirmation of PR' card.AleksL wrote:Hi! I need help as the guidance notes are really confusing on this one!
I am originally from Poland. I have come to UK in May 2004 (just after Poland joined EEA) and lived and worked here since. I was registered under WRS scheme and then had a Residence Permit that expired in November 2010.
In 2014 I married British Citizen and now I am trying to apply for naturalisation based on that marriage.
BUT in the guidance it says that if I am an EEA citizen I need to prove that I have a right to be in UK which means applying for yet another costly piece of paper - permanent residence permit.
QUESTION: Is it necessary to apply for that permit if I am applying for naturalisation based on marriage? Can I just ignore that part of the form?
Can someone please advice?
Thanks
Aleks
Naturalisation as the spouse of British Citizenship is a section 6(2) application.ohara wrote:The document certifying permanent residence is neither a permit nor costly
There is no "naturalisation based on marriage" - the only benefit of marriage to a British citizen is that you can get there in 5 years instead of 6.
+1CR001 wrote:Naturalisation as the spouse of British Citizenship is a section 6(2) application.
A normal (6 year non BC spouse) route naturalisation application is a section 6(1) application.
So yes, they are granted under different sections of the Act.
On top of everything else it is costly! I don't have a spare £65 at the end of the month to pay for something that proves that I have the right that I automatically gained 7 years ago anyway! I think it's utterly ridiculous and serves no purpose apart from making money and making life difficult!ohara wrote:The document certifying permanent residence is neither a permit nor costly
There is no "naturalisation based on marriage" - the only benefit of marriage to a British citizen is that you can get there in 5 years instead of 6.
Tough luck, love!!! My immigration journey, as a single person, cost about £6000 over 6 years in Home Office fees alone. And that does not factor in all the taxes et al that I paid as a normal resident or the additional costs such as getting paperwork translated, English tests, etc.AleksL wrote:On top of everything else it is costly! I don't have a spare £65 at the end of the month to pay for something that proves that I have the right that I automatically gained 7 years ago anyway!
Join the club. I am often appalled at how little people born in these isles (including children of immigrants) know of their own country. It would also help if the English brush up on their English.AleksL wrote:I probably know more about life in UK than 90% of Brits