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British Citizenship after ILR - Gap
Posted: Sat May 21, 2011 6:53 pm
by deepu_0158
Dear All,
I am aware that a person gets his citizenship after 12 months after obtaining ILR, and he should not be out of UK for more than 90 days.
If a person is not in UK for more than 90 days after ILR, does he need to wait for another 1 year or does his ILR gets invalid and has to again wait for 5 years (for ILR) + 1 year (for citizenship)....... provided the rules are the same
Re: British Citizenship after ILR - Gap
Posted: Sat May 21, 2011 11:33 pm
by joh118
deepu_0158 wrote:Dear All,
I am aware that a person gets his citizenship after 12 months after obtaining ILR, and he should not be out of UK for more than 90 days.
If a person is not in UK for more than 90 days after ILR, does he need to wait for another 1 year or does his ILR gets invalid and has to again wait for 5 years (for ILR) + 1 year (for citizenship)....... provided the rules are the same
if you spend more than 90 days out of UK in the 12 months before you submit your application, then you have to wait until your absences in the last 12 months are below 90 days.
If the TOTAL absences from the UK in the 5 years before the application is more than 450 days, then you must wait until your absences become less than 450 days. Please note this does not necessarily mean having to wait for another 5 years. Forexample, if the majority of the absences were in the first year then waiting for another year will make absences go below 450 days. The same goes for the 12 month rule. Going over 90 days does not necessarily mean having to wait for another 12 months.
Posted: Sat May 21, 2011 11:43 pm
by gidoc
Posted: Sun May 22, 2011 3:01 pm
by deepu_0158
thank you Guys
Posted: Mon May 23, 2011 8:36 pm
by ILR_Applicant_UK
The 450 and 90 day requiremnts are not mandatory, the home secretary has discretion over waiving these, if you have valid reasons. Some of these maybe
a) Away due to work reasons where your employer had sent you abroad.
b) Away to support family back home for reasons like illness etc..
Your case is a bit weaker IF you don't meet both the 90 day in the last yr + 450 day in the last 5 yrs requirement, its only weaker, not an outright rejection. I applied for my family naturalisation recently, and was recommened to hold my wife's application as she was away over 550 days and also away more than 90 days in the last 365 days. A bulk of her time away was due to accompanying me on medium term business stays abroad. I told the NCS lady I thought these two requirements were discretionary. She said yes they are, but your wife doesn't meet the 2 criteria. I asked her to send the application away anyway. Obviosuly, I haven't heard the fate of either of our applications, but the point I'm trying to make is these stays are discretionary - it maybe worth applying, the worst that can happen is you lost the application fee - I know the 600+ pound fee is substantial - the upside is substantial.
Ofcourse,there is another condition, and this is NOT discretionary - 5 years prior to the date you're submitting your naturalisation application, you have to be physically present in the UK, so even if you had gone away for 3 days to paris for a short holiday, you should not apply - your application will get rejected.