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overseas trips and british citizenship
Posted: Tue Apr 03, 2012 9:57 pm
by niteshj
Hi,
I will hopefully be getting ILR (via 5 years on HSMP + Tier-1; I am not married) in a month so just planning ahead for my citizenship.
Some questions:
* are we allowed to travel for long periods like say 6 months overseas (continuous) and then come back to UK for another 9 months and apply for citizenship - this will mean 3 months of the 6 month trip will be used to satisfy the 12 month rule
* I have already travelled 220 days during my 5 years on Tier-1 (unfortunately, most at the end of the 5 year period), does that mean that I can only travel another 230 days (to satisfy the 450 days overseas allowed in 5 years rule)
I have seen people mention that they can't be overseas more than 2 years at time - that would definitely breach the citizenship rules and require them to wait 5 years before they can apply for citizenship right?
Thanks
Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2012 7:49 am
by Jambo
Your understanding of the naturalisation requirements is correct.
The 2 years rule is for not losing ILR status.
Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 11:13 am
by niteshj
Ok .. So just to be 100% sure..
This means that we can take a holiday of more than 3 months at a time? (unlike ILR application that does not allow overseas trips of more than 3 months at a time)
Posted: Fri Apr 06, 2012 12:11 pm
by Jambo
Correct. It will just postpone the date you will be eligible to apply for naturalisation.
Posted: Sun Oct 21, 2012 6:31 pm
by niteshj
has something changed in the british citizenship rules? I am now an UK resident (5 years on HSMP + Tier 1) and I thought we were NOT allowed to be out of the country for more than 450 days in the 4/5 years prior to applying for citizenship regardless of whether it was for work or not?
but here I see that its ok!
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/briti ... cesfromuk/
Which is great news if its correct as I have just been offered a potential Finland project role (but employed in UK) and I was going to turn it down because of this citizenship issue.
Posted: Sun Oct 21, 2012 11:45 pm
by Jambo
niteshj wrote:has something changed in the british citizenship rules? I am now an UK resident (5 years on HSMP + Tier 1) and I thought we were NOT allowed to be out of the country for more than 450 days in the 4/5 years prior to applying for citizenship regardless of whether it was for work or not?
but here I see that its ok!
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/briti ... cesfromuk/
Which is great news if its correct as I have just been offered a potential Finland project role (but employed in UK) and I was going to turn it down because of this citizenship issue.
The 450 days are a requirement but discretion can be applied. See Q3 in
Citizenship FAQs - Common Questions - Read before posting.
Posted: Mon Oct 22, 2012 12:17 am
by niteshj
Jambo wrote:niteshj wrote:has something changed in the british citizenship rules? I am now an UK resident (5 years on HSMP + Tier 1) and I thought we were NOT allowed to be out of the country for more than 450 days in the 4/5 years prior to applying for citizenship regardless of whether it was for work or not?
but here I see that its ok!
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/briti ... cesfromuk/
Which is great news if its correct as I have just been offered a potential Finland project role (but employed in UK) and I was going to turn it down because of this citizenship issue.
The 450 days are a requirement but discretion can be applied. See Q3 in
Citizenship FAQs - Common Questions - Read before posting.
yes I understand up to 900 days can be allowed under discretion. I also understand that the maximum 100 days away within the final year of applying for UK citizenship can be waived under discretion too.
Guess I will have to pray for the best when I apply as I would have been away for most of the year on work assignments.
Posted: Mon Oct 22, 2012 12:14 pm
by Gyfrinachgar
niteshj wrote:Guess I will have to pray for the best when I apply as I would have been away for most of the year on work assignments.
It is a big gamble, but since the alternative is to wait several years, it is probably worth it. Writing a compelling cover letter containing solid arguments will increase your chances.
Good luck!
Posted: Mon Jul 01, 2013 6:02 pm
by niteshj