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A registration certificate is for EEA citizens. Unless you're an EEA citizen, you wouldn't have a registration certificate: https://www.gov.uk/eea-registration-certificaterando101 wrote:Hello all
Could anyone help me understand the difference between "registration certificate" and "residence card"?
I currently have a "registration certificate" and I'm about to apply for RoR, but I'm not sure if RoR fits under card or certificate.
Thank you
That's what I thought too, until I read the the vignette on my passport where it clearly sayschaoclive wrote: A registration certificate is for EEA citizens.
A residence card is for non-EEA citizens
If this is the case, you would need to talk to the Home Office who have issued you with the document. I think it's a little strange.rando101 wrote:That's what I thought too, until I read the the vignette on my passport where it clearly sayschaoclive wrote: A registration certificate is for EEA citizens.
A residence card is for non-EEA citizens
"Type Of Document: Registration Certificate"
I'm a non-EEA spouse of EEA national.
No, it's not confusing at all. The audience for both of the documents are different, i.e. EU=registration certificate; non-EU=residence card. This is very clear online and in the Directive: http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... 123:EN:PDF where a registration cert is said to be issued to a 'union citizen' and a residence card is for 'family members who are not nationals of a Member State'.UKBA HUNTER wrote:The both words are confusing and can be replaceable unless their correct tittle eea1 eea2 attached them.
EEA1/2 do not exist any more. The new 'titles' are: EEA(QP) and EEA(FM).UKBA HUNTER wrote:Without using eea1 eea2 both terms are not recognizable like no human without their surname. Eea1 eea2 will definitely written on each relevant document.
I have just checked and I can say categorically that neither 'EEA1' nor 'EEA2' state that they are 'EEA1' or 'EEA2'.UKBA HUNTER wrote:Without using eea1 eea2 both terms are not recognizable like no human without their surname. Eea1 eea2 will definitely written on each relevant document.
Wrong again. Only the application form is called EEA(QP)/(FM). This has ABSOLUTELY no bearing on the 'registration cert' or 'residence card' at all.UKBA HUNTER wrote:If the new terms are used then without using these terms as a tittle like EEA(QP) and EEA(FM) still the word "registration certificate" and "Residence card" has no meaning alone.
My spouse (Croatia/EEA) has one of those blue paper wallets that folds three ways and in one of the pages there is a vignette. And that vignette reads "Type Of Document: Registration Certificate"chaoclive wrote:My EEA1 registration certificate is on a small blue card and my civil partner's EEA2 residence card is a normal vignette not affixed to a blue card.
My EEA spouse used CR1 and I used CR4 (special route for Croatian and their family members, but similar results as EEA1 and EEA2 I guess)chaoclive wrote:My 'EEA1' states: registration certificate. My civil partner's 'EEA2' states: 'Residence card of a family member of an EEA national'. The application forms used to be called 'EEA1' & 'EEA2'; these terms are redundancy now.
Really not sure why! I don't, unfortunately, know anything about the Croatian applications but i'm guessing that they (as it seems from your reply above) do follow the same wording. I don't think it will be a major issue but you could write to the Home Office if you would like clarification. I haven't heard of this kind of situation before. It may simply be an error but it's a good idea to try to have it resolved!rando101 wrote:My spouse (Croatia/EEA) has one of those blue paper wallets that folds three ways and in one of the pages there is a vignette. And that vignette reads "Type Of Document: Registration Certificate"chaoclive wrote:My EEA1 registration certificate is on a small blue card and my civil partner's EEA2 residence card is a normal vignette not affixed to a blue card.
As for me (non-EEA), I've got the vignette on one of the pages of my passport and my vignette also says "Type Of Document: Registration Certificate"
My EEA spouse used CR1 and I used CR4 (special route for Croatian and their family members, but similar results as EEA1 and EEA2 I guess)chaoclive wrote:My 'EEA1' states: registration certificate. My civil partner's 'EEA2' states: 'Residence card of a family member of an EEA national'. The application forms used to be called 'EEA1' & 'EEA2'; these terms are redundancy now.
As you pointed out previous, "certificate" is for EEA and "card" is for non-EEA and that's in line with what both CR1 and CR4 forms follow in terms of wording. But strangely the vignettes themselves do not.
Registration certificate*vinny wrote:The issue of the Residence certificate and Residence card are well defined.