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Student Applying for residency
Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2017 10:35 am
by mbrown22
Hi
I have been in the uk since september 2011 and was a student for most part (undergraduate and masters) and am now doing a Phd. I am fully funded and as such receive a full stipend and am able to support myself and have occasionally worked part time jobs over the last five years but have been unemployed for the most part. Am i still eligible to apply for British Citizenship after I apply for permanent residence?
My main worry is that I heard and read somewhere regarding the need to have private health insurance but I cannot find some proper information about my situation.
Many thanks!
Re: Student Applying for residency
Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2017 10:42 am
by Casa
mbrown22 wrote:Hi
I have been in the uk since september 2011 and was a student for most part (undergraduate and masters) and am now doing a Phd. I am fully funded and as such receive a full stipend and am able to support myself and have occasionally worked part time jobs over the last five years but have been unemployed for the most part. Am i still eligible to apply for British Citizenship after I apply for permanent residence?
My main worry is that I heard and read somewhere regarding the need to have private health insurance but I cannot find some proper information about my situation.
Many thanks!
CSI was required for the qualifying period when you are an unemployed student. PR will be refused without it.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... udents.pdf
Re: Student Applying for residency
Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2017 10:48 am
by noajthan
mbrown22 wrote:Hi
I have been in the uk since september 2011 and was a student for most part (undergraduate and masters) and am now doing a Phd. I am fully funded and as such receive a full stipend and am able to support myself and have occasionally worked part time jobs over the last five years but have been unemployed for the most part. Am i still eligible to apply for British Citizenship after I apply for permanent residence?
My main worry is that I heard and read somewhere regarding the need to have private health insurance but I cannot find some proper information about my situation.
Many thanks!
Economic activity is not a requirement for those contemplating naturalising.
However you will need confirmation of settled (eg PR) status.
If no CSI in place as a student did you have an alternative?
For example:
- Foreign EHIC;
RC issued to you as student during/before 2011;
Union citizen sponsor;
Re: Student Applying for residency
Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2017 10:53 am
by mbrown22
Hi
I'm from italy and looking around I noticed I had an Italian health insurance card around but might have lost it. Would that count? Were I to obtain a new one over the coming weeks, would that make me eligible?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_h ... rance_card
Re: Student Applying for residency
Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2017 11:03 am
by noajthan
mbrown22 wrote:Hi
I'm from italy and looking around I noticed I had an Italian health insurance card around but might have lost it. Would that count? Were I to obtain a new one over the coming weeks, would that make me eligible?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_h ... rance_card
You need to submit proof of possessing the EHIC or similar at the relevant time, including in the past if you were a student in the past.
Re: Student Applying for residency
Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2017 11:06 am
by mbrown22
I think my card has been expired for a while now so will have to renew, and I have used the NHS in the last 6 years on a few occasions.
many thanks for all your help!
Re: Student Applying for residency
Posted: Tue Jan 17, 2017 11:09 am
by noajthan
mbrown22 wrote:I think my card has been expired for a while now so will have to renew, and I have used the NHS in the last 6 years on a few occasions.
many thanks for all your help!
So that won't help your case and won't have kept your PR clock running.
Re: Student Applying for residency
Posted: Wed Jan 18, 2017 6:14 am
by Noetic
Sometimes it is possible to get PR with a letter (translated?) from your country of birth confirming you were covered by them / entitled to an EHIC, even if you no longer have the card in your possession. I don't recall seeing Italy mentioned in the examples but it's worth a shot.