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tetra_16 wrote:Hi all,
I've red through most posts but I am still unsure about how to proceed.
I'm an EEA national and have applied for BC without PR (a mistake, most probably) and have now received a letter from HO requesting more documents. Specifically proof of comprehensive medical insurance while I was a student at university (2010-2014).
As many before me, I was unaware of this and did not have insurance - I did request a EHIC card at some point, but I believe I won't be able to find it now (it's been almost 8 years now). Does anyone perhaps know a way around physically having a card - and if it's a letter from my home country, is there a way I can ask for an extension from HO to the deadline which is 2 weeks from now?
I did however have an EEA parent working in the UK at the time - does this count?
I'd appreciate any help at this point. ( I have 2 weeks to send everything to them - or my application and £1000 will go down the drain...) Many thanks in advance
noajthan wrote:tetra_16 wrote:Hi all,
I've red through most posts but I am still unsure about how to proceed.
I'm an EEA national and have applied for BC without PR (a mistake, most probably) and have now received a letter from HO requesting more documents. Specifically proof of comprehensive medical insurance while I was a student at university (2010-2014).
As many before me, I was unaware of this and did not have insurance - I did request a EHIC card at some point, but I believe I won't be able to find it now (it's been almost 8 years now). Does anyone perhaps know a way around physically having a card - and if it's a letter from my home country, is there a way I can ask for an extension from HO to the deadline which is 2 weeks from now?
I did however have an EEA parent working in the UK at the time - does this count?
I'd appreciate any help at this point. ( I have 2 weeks to send everything to them - or my application and £1000 will go down the drain...) Many thanks in advanceIf parent was exercising treaty rights as a qualified person (& has done so continuously for 5 years) & you were aged under 21 and you were in UK for the same period of 5 years then your parent can be your sponsor.
In that case it doesn't matter what you were doing in UK, & it doesn't matter about CSI (assuming parent was not a student).
Otherwise, if applying in own right, did you have a RC issued to you as a student in or before 2011
![]()
if so there is a transitional arrangement you can use.
Ref: https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/ ... issued.pdf
Shame about the lack of RC, that would have clinched it.tetra_16 wrote:Thanks a lot for that. Unfortunately, I think my parents were exercising their treaty rights for 4 years before I was 21, but after that supported me throughout university (and still worked in the UK at that point) which is the period when HO requires CSI. (Is there any way I can prove that - provided it matters?)
And unfortunately I've never had an RC before.
noajthan wrote:Shame about the lack of RC, that would have clinched it.tetra_16 wrote:Thanks a lot for that. Unfortunately, I think my parents were exercising their treaty rights for 4 years before I was 21, but after that supported me throughout university (and still worked in the UK at that point) which is the period when HO requires CSI. (Is there any way I can prove that - provided it matters?)
And unfortunately I've never had an RC before.
You will have to apply as a dependent family member then - with parent as your EEA national sponsor.
Parents can still be your sponsor, even age 21+.
For the period you were over 20 (ie 21+) you will have to prove dependency.
Financial dependency is fine if you have the records.
See HO guidance:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... s_v3_0.pdf
- ref page 17+
I only had that one card at some point - I vaguely remember having it, and I have no idea where it is currently (if I still have it). Although still looking.LilyLalilu wrote:If you didn't have the actual non UK-EHIC card but held health insurance in your country of origin, it may be worth trying to obtain a letter confirming your level of cover from the health authorities there. This may then satisfy the Home Office.
I applied sometime in August - would you say this makes a difference?Ishjon wrote:Hi, can I please ask you when you have applied?
If you apply as a dependent of your parent then you don't need to show CSI as, when you are sponsored, it doesn't matter what you have been doing.tetra_16 wrote:Thanks a lot for that - can I still send them documents somehow proving my dependency on my parents - instead of the CSI they are asking for, or would they not accept this now?
...
noajthan wrote:If you apply as a dependent of your parent then you don't need to show CSI as, when you are sponsored, it doesn't matter what you have been doing.tetra_16 wrote:Thanks a lot for that - can I still send them documents somehow proving my dependency on my parents - instead of the CSI they are asking for, or would they not accept this now?
...
Confirmation of your PR depends on your sponsor's activity.
If you have a sponsor all you have to do is prove your dependency (if aged over 21, not for age 20 or less) & the fact that you lived in UK for 5 years;
(plus prove your relationship to your sponsor & your own identity ofcourse).
Let's hope they accept it as it may be only way to retrieve your current situation.tetra_16 wrote:Sorry, I didn't phrase that well. I applied for citizenship and they are asking for proof of CSI (I didn't know this was needed) - so if instead of sending proof of CSI, I send them proof of being dependent on my parents, will they accept it for my citizenship application? Or will I have to apply again?