kamoe wrote:
I came to live in the UK in Oct 2018, and we married in Aug 2020. The only proof we lived together is from Oct 2019 (as joined utility bills). We lived together in a shared house between Oct 2018 and Oct 2019 but did not pay any bills. Does it mean my spouse has to wait until Oct 2024 to get settled status?
Your spouse will be eligible to get settled status after completing 5 years as the family member of a EU citizen. The moment you got married your spouse became the family member of a EU citizen, so they will be clearly eligible for Settled Status on August 2025.
To be eligible before that, on the basis of a durable partnership prior to 2020, then you would need to prove that you cohabited AND held joint financial commitments for TWO years by the end of 2020 (which from your description, doesn't seem the case?). And even if you succeeded in proving this, the start of the family relationship as an unmarried durable partner would probably end up very near the actual wedding date, because it's at the end of the two years of cohabitation that you are considered "family", so 2018+2=2020.
Or can they get settled status if I can get settled status this year in Oct 2023 (also not sure if I will get settled status this year because I don't have proof)?
No. An EU citizen status DOES NOT automatically transfer to the non-EU spouse. Each person has to meet the requirements on their own.
To qualify for settled status,
- EU nationals have to complete 5 years in the UK as an EU citizen;
- non-EU nationals have to complete 5 years in the UK as the family member of a EU citizen.
As such, your clock starts in October 2018 (assuming that you were a EU citizen when you moved to the UK), and your spouse's clock starts in August 2020.
In addition, as their Tier 2 Visa will expire in Aug 2023
Once again,
your spouse very likely* no longer has a Tier 2 visa.
I'm saying this for the third time: Your spouse's tier 2 visa was very likely* curtailed the moment they got pre-settled status, so very likely* it is not true that "their visa will expire in August 2023", because very likely* that visa is no longer valid as of today.
do they need to apply for a new visa via the pre-settlement route?
You are once again mixing up two very different things:
A. The legal permission to live and work in the UK. This can take the form of Pre-seltted status, a Tier 2 visa, and others. You cannot have two of these at the same time, and also, you do not need more than one of these at the same time. That is why I say your spouse's Tier 2 visa was very likely* curtailed the second their pre-Settled status was issued.
Because under UK immigration rules, one cannot have more than one valid UK visa at any given time.
B. The plastic card that is issued to people who have been granted a legal permission to stay. This is called BRP (Biometric Residence Permit), or for EEA or EUSS routes, also BRC (Biometric Residence Card). But that's it. It's a plastic card. It shows you have the legal permission described above, but it's not the permission itself. The fact that your spouse has a physical card like these with an expiration date in the future DOES NOT mean that visa is still valid. Also, applying for a new plastic card does not mean either that they are applying for a new visa.
If what you mean to ask is how your spouse can obtain a new BRC given their current BRP will expire in August 2023, you were already given an answer to that vey early in this post. As I and @meself already said in
my first answer to your question, your spouse can apply to get a new physical plastic card with expiration date beyond 2023 to prove her pre-settled status:
The above does NOT mean your spouse will be applying for a new visa. This is simply the process of ordering a new plastic card (in the same way you replace your bank debit card when it expires, which does not mean you are opening a new bank account)!!!
In summary:
1. Your spouse already has a legal right to live and work in the UK, which is pre-settled status and which expires in 2026, so for the time being they don't need to be applying for any new visa.
3. If they did apply for a new visa, like Tier 2, then their pre-settled status would be very likely* cancelled, in the same way their Tier 2 was very likely* cancelled, because under UK immigration rules,
one cannot have two UK visas/residence permits at the same time.
4. Your spouse can "order" a new plastic card to show for her pre-settled status, with expiration date of their pre-settled status (beyond 2023). This is NOT the same as applying for a new visa.
5. Your spouse's 5-year clock for ILR was very likely* wiped the moment they were issued pre-settled status, since you can't apply for ILR without a valid Tier 2 visa.
6. The good thing is, your partner's Settled Status clock starts from the wedding date (August 2020), not from the issuing of the pre-settled status (September 2021).
I hope that is now clear?
*IMPORTANT NOTE I do not have first-hand experience or heard accounts of Tier 2 visas getting cancelled after and due to obtaining pre-settled status, and that is the reason why I say "very likely" instead of "definitely" when referring to the curtailment of your spouse visa. I make these comments under the knowledge that under UK rules it is not possible to hold two different visas or residence permits at the same time.