Page 1 of 1
Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 1:58 pm
by rahmsye
Hi,
Wanted some answers that I have bene confused on, I have been in ireland for about five months now and working for two months. I have utility bills and bank statements even sky and tv licence. We have also got salsa lessons here in Dublin.
I wanted to ask would this be enough to satisfy UKBA for a EEA family permit and then a RC?
I have seen on here people applying for FP after staying here for three months.
Thank you
P.S. Would like to add have also registered for poll register and got medical cards as well as being reffered to the hospital for specialist treatment for EU partner and non eeu is pregnant not sure if this all helps or is hindrance.
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:03 pm
by noajthan
rahmsye wrote:Hi,
Wanted some answers that I have bene confused on, I have been in ireland for about five months now and working for two months. I have utility bills and bank statements even sky and tv licence. We have also got salsa lessons here in Dublin.
I wanted to ask would this be enough to satisfy UKBA for a EEA family permit and then a RC?
I have seen on here people applying for FP after staying here for three months.
Thank you
Unlikely to satisfy UK's
centre of life requirements, which is what HO (rightly or wrongly) will apply and use to weigh up your case..
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:04 pm
by member
rahmsye wrote:Hi,
Wanted some answers that I have bene confused on, I have been in ireland for about five months now and working for two months. I have utility bills and bank statements even sky and tv licence. We have also got salsa lessons here in Dublin.
I wanted to ask would this be enough to satisfy UKBA for a EEA family permit and then a RC?
I have seen on here people applying for FP after staying here for three months.
Thank you
Who is going to apply for the EEA FP?
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:05 pm
by rahmsye
noajthan wrote:rahmsye wrote:Hi,
Wanted some answers that I have bene confused on, I have been in ireland for about five months now and working for two months. I have utility bills and bank statements even sky and tv licence. We have also got salsa lessons here in Dublin.
I wanted to ask would this be enough to satisfy UKBA for a EEA family permit and then a RC?
I have seen on here people applying for FP after staying here for three months.
Thank you
Unlikely to satisfy UK's
centre of life requirements, which is what HO (rightly or wrongly) will apply and use to weigh up your case..
So would I need to be working here longer or further integrate myself into the country?
Thank for the reply.
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:06 pm
by rahmsye
member wrote:rahmsye wrote:Hi,
Wanted some answers that I have bene confused on, I have been in ireland for about five months now and working for two months. I have utility bills and bank statements even sky and tv licence. We have also got salsa lessons here in Dublin.
I wanted to ask would this be enough to satisfy UKBA for a EEA family permit and then a RC?
I have seen on here people applying for FP after staying here for three months.
Thank you
Who is going to apply for the EEA FP?
My non eea wife (ukrainian) i the husband is British national.
Sorry for the lack of information.
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:11 pm
by noajthan
rahmsye wrote:So would I need to be working here longer or further integrate myself into the country?
Thank for the reply.
Even under the cleaner, purer EU law you would be expected to have been exercising treaty rights for 3 months or so.
UK guidance is thin on the ground, this is a little dated but gives an indication regarding
centre of life:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... dacted.pdf
For example, a British citizen who has lived and worked in another member state for a period of two years is more likely to meet the requirement of regulation 9(2)(c) than a British citizen who was employed in another Member state for a period of four months
Note the phrase "
more likely", it doesn't say "
is guaranteed".
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:27 pm
by member
rahmsye wrote:member wrote:rahmsye wrote:Hi,
Wanted some answers that I have bene confused on, I have been in ireland for about five months now and working for two months. I have utility bills and bank statements even sky and tv licence. We have also got salsa lessons here in Dublin.
I wanted to ask would this be enough to satisfy UKBA for a EEA family permit and then a RC?
I have seen on here people applying for FP after staying here for three months.
Thank you
Who is going to apply for the EEA FP?
My non eea wife (ukrainian) i the husband is British national.
Sorry for the lack of information.
What is her current immigration status in Ireland?
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:35 pm
by rahmsye
Who is going to apply for the EEA FP?[/quote]
My non eea wife (ukrainian) i the husband is British national.
She is a resident of ireland and has a gnib card with stamp4 on it.
She is awaiting for her residence card which is due on August.
She is considered an irish resident according to GNIB with reentry visa stampe don her passport.
Sorry for the lack of information.[/quote]
What is her current immigration status in Ireland?[/quote]
Re: Working for two months living in ire for 5 months
Posted: Sat Apr 16, 2016 2:35 pm
by rahmsye
What is her current immigration status in Ireland?
My non eea wife (ukrainian) i the husband is British national.
She is a resident of ireland and has a gnib card with stamp4 on it.
She is awaiting for her residence card which is due on August.
She is considered an irish resident according to GNIB with reentry visa stampe don her passport.