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Hi,avro1959 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 12:40 amFolks, I've tried searching the forum for an answer to this but wasn't able to find relevant results.
Short story for context: I'm Canadian and my spouse is Irish, we flew into DUB late 2019 with our marriage cert and declared our intent to stay; we hit up Burgh Quay and I was issued a 3-year IRP (stamp 4). Went back to Canada to wrap things up but after some unexpected medical issues + a pandemic, we were unable to complete our move to Ireland. Around 2021 we moved to Belfast and have lived there since. My stamp 4 IRP expired in 2022 and I naively didn't think to inform INIS that we left the country. Now we're looking to move to the republic and I'm trying to figure out my next steps.
Question: has anyone been in a similar situation with a long-expired stamp 4 IRP (based on Irish spouse)? Was there a way to renew the IRP after expiry or is the best approach to re-do a "landing" at DUB airport with our marriage cert and try to get a new IRP at Burgh Quay?
Thank you for the reply Angel99. I was under the impression that I cannot apply for an IRP while on a tourist/temporary visitor permission. Wouldn't I be entering as a temporary visitor if I crossed the (unmanned) border from NI to ROI? I may try this route if there's no harm in doing so (although I'm not entirely knowledgeable about the consequences of such stuff).
I'm already eligible to apply for Irish citizenship based on the spousal route and 3 years of legal residence in NI - I'll be doing up the application asap. We're just trying to move back to ROI in the short-term, hence trying to figure out the IRP situation.
The Common Travel Area only exists for Irish and British citizens; it is irrelevant to anyone else. Checks are rare but it can’t be legally used by anyone other than Irish or British and it’s best not to suggest it is available to others. Citizens with visa waiver rights crossing by road are relying on their visa waiver rights, not the CTA, even if it feels the same. It won’t make much difference to the OP, but it can confuse other readers without visa waiver rights.
Hi,Vadrar wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 9:31 amThe Common Travel Area only exists for Irish and British citizens; it is irrelevant to anyone else. Checks are rare but it can’t be legally used by anyone other than Irish or British and it’s best not to suggest it is available to others. Citizens with visa waiver rights crossing by road are relying on their visa waiver rights, not the CTA, even if it feels the same. It won’t make much difference to the OP, but it can confuse other readers without visa waiver rights.
Exactly - a spouse who is not Irish or British entering Ireland needs immigration permission either via EU or Irish law. Neither is CTA and the CTA gives them no rights. If they had access to CTA rights they’d need no further immigration permission- but they do, as you say and so the CTA shpuldnt be suggested as a route.Angel99 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 10:44 amHi,Vadrar wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 9:31 amThe Common Travel Area only exists for Irish and British citizens; it is irrelevant to anyone else. Checks are rare but it can’t be legally used by anyone other than Irish or British and it’s best not to suggest it is available to others. Citizens with visa waiver rights crossing by road are relying on their visa waiver rights, not the CTA, even if it feels the same. It won’t make much difference to the OP, but it can confuse other readers without visa waiver rights.
You are aware EU and Irish spouses can cross from UK to Ireland and apply for Stamp 4EUFam and Stamp 4(via
Irish National Unit, Immigration Service Delivery) if the Irish spouse doesn't have Irish visa even if they are not visa waiver nationals.
That's why I mentioned CTA in my advise.
The post is about spouses of Irish citizens.
No, I am not misunderstanding myself or the CTA legislation at all.
Correct. Rights conferred by EU law or Irish immigration law. Not CTA. Which is the point I've made multiple times. Some spouses may also have visa waiver rights because of their birth citizenship, in addition to their EU or Irish immigration rights conferred by their spouse being EU/Irish.
Incorrect, see the sources above, or refer to the CTA legislation.
Of course. This is a right provided by Irish domestic immigration law. It has nothing to do with the CTA - or it would be reciprocated by the UK with residency in ROI by spouses of British to qualify for British naturalisation. This doesn't happen, and so isn't part of the *entirely reciprocal* CTA.
I think I now understand where you are doing; you're conflating two different things and calling them the same name. The CTA is a set of rights that grant freedom of movement to Irish and British citizens. It is *not* a geography and it is not the presence or absence of staffing at a border; both are nothing more than logistics.Angel99 wrote: ↑Mon Jul 01, 2024 4:18 pmNo one mentioned CTA covers Irish spouses or Union citizens. I just tried to make it clear to you if you are one of the family members I mentioned, you can travel via Northern Ireland to Republic of Ireland without an entry visa regardless if you are visa waiver national. After arrival you can request for residence permission letter for IRP from the relevant authorities and it will be granted.
This all possible because of CTA especially for Irish family members since Union citizens could still apply for entry visa at the land border.