armandk wrote:I am an EEA national with permanent residence and my wife is a non-EEA citizen who has been granted an EEA residence card (valid for 5 years) as the spouse of an EEA national. My wife is currently a full-time university student.
I have lost my job and am intending to seek income-based jobseeker’s allowance.
If you have been working in the UK and paid enough NICs over the last two relevant tax years, you will claim Contribution based JSA (CBJSA). CBJSA is not a public fund. This would give you full CBJSA for a mazimum of 6 months, regardless of household income, savings, capital.
If you were claiming Income based JSA (IBJSA) then your wife's student loans and grants ect would be counted as part of your household income (even if she didn't take these) when your claim was calculated.
armandk wrote: Would it make it more difficult for her to claim PR after having spent 5 years in the UK as my spouse (because she was seeking social assistance)?
As a student, your wife is not allowed welfare payments as her loans, grants, ect are for her to live on. Students work if they need more money. It is more likely that your IBJSA claim would be refused or reduced, because your wife will be expected to keep you too with her student loans and grants while you look for work.
armandk wrote:Would this history cause any difficulties to her after I naturalise (which I intend to do in 1 year)?
As a student, your wife mustn't claim and you must not take extra benefits for her. It would cause difficulties for you with UK citizenship if you were tempted to obmit your wife's student status. The benefits offices data match and it is fraud to lie to get benefits.