US to UK on Expired EEA FP, worst case scenario?
Posted: Sun Jan 13, 2013 10:16 pm
Hello,
I'm a US citizen who has been living and working in the UK with my EEA husband (who has lived and worked here for 10+ years) since November 2012, on an EEA Family Permit. I will apply soon for the EEA2. We need to travel back to the US end of April, but my EEA Family Permit expires mid-April. I have seen some pretty helpful and reassuring advice on this forum to the effect of "You can still enter the UK as the non-EEA spouse of an EEA resident exercising treaty rights". If I return to the UK, with my husband traveling with me, with both our passports, our marriage certificate, proof of employment and residency, my expired EEA FP in my passport, along with the EEA2 Certificate of Application (that I hope to get in time), what is the worst case situation that we can expect upon return to the UK? I know there are no guarantees, and that best case scenario is that reentry will go smoothly, average scenario, we might have to wait around for an hour or so being questioned and trying to sort things out with the right immigration officer who has the experience/authority to deal with us. But worse case scenario...? I get sent back to the US? We find a flight to France and take the ferry in, hoping for more understanding immigration officers?
I also understand that best case scenario I'll get this Code 1A stamp, which is good for 6 months? Can I travel and reenter on that Code 1A stamp (we also had travel plans for May, possibly still before I get my EEA2 approved)? Should I not push my luck trying to "manipulate" the rules (is it really?) and instead just sit tight in the UK once (if) I get back in, until my EEA2 comes through?
Also, what's the worst I can expect at the airport here, when we're trying to leave? When we returned to the US for Christmas, I believe they did check in the UK that I had the right visa to take a round trip flight and land back in the UK. Might they not let me fly with an expired EEA Family Permit? As a US citizen I could, in theory, get a tourist visa and don't need special permissions on traveling to the UK, so would the check-in clerk be uptight (if they're not up to speed on EU rules) about letting me fly in the first place?
I'm a US citizen who has been living and working in the UK with my EEA husband (who has lived and worked here for 10+ years) since November 2012, on an EEA Family Permit. I will apply soon for the EEA2. We need to travel back to the US end of April, but my EEA Family Permit expires mid-April. I have seen some pretty helpful and reassuring advice on this forum to the effect of "You can still enter the UK as the non-EEA spouse of an EEA resident exercising treaty rights". If I return to the UK, with my husband traveling with me, with both our passports, our marriage certificate, proof of employment and residency, my expired EEA FP in my passport, along with the EEA2 Certificate of Application (that I hope to get in time), what is the worst case situation that we can expect upon return to the UK? I know there are no guarantees, and that best case scenario is that reentry will go smoothly, average scenario, we might have to wait around for an hour or so being questioned and trying to sort things out with the right immigration officer who has the experience/authority to deal with us. But worse case scenario...? I get sent back to the US? We find a flight to France and take the ferry in, hoping for more understanding immigration officers?
I also understand that best case scenario I'll get this Code 1A stamp, which is good for 6 months? Can I travel and reenter on that Code 1A stamp (we also had travel plans for May, possibly still before I get my EEA2 approved)? Should I not push my luck trying to "manipulate" the rules (is it really?) and instead just sit tight in the UK once (if) I get back in, until my EEA2 comes through?
Also, what's the worst I can expect at the airport here, when we're trying to leave? When we returned to the US for Christmas, I believe they did check in the UK that I had the right visa to take a round trip flight and land back in the UK. Might they not let me fly with an expired EEA Family Permit? As a US citizen I could, in theory, get a tourist visa and don't need special permissions on traveling to the UK, so would the check-in clerk be uptight (if they're not up to speed on EU rules) about letting me fly in the first place?