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You are wrong. A spouse of a British citizen is an application under Section 6(2) of the British nationality act and is based on the last 3 years residence immediately preceding date of application. It is a rule within the citizenship legislation and nothing to do with EU rules.silverxlibra wrote: ↑Wed Nov 28, 2018 7:18 pmI beg to differ. I have just applied for British citizenship after getting my EEA PR card after 5 years of residence.
Surinder Singh route is an EU immigration route, not an internal UK one. You are essentially treated as the family member of an *EEA citizen*, NOT a British one. You therefore have to have been living in the UK for the past 5 years. The only thing waved is the requirement to have held PR for at least 12 months before applying for British citizenship, specifically if you're *married* to a British citizen (but not if you came here as any other family member, including as an unmarried partner).
You are missing the point and confusing the different requirements for different applications. No one can qualify for PR or ILR without having 5 years residence in the UK. There is no 3 year route for ILR and PR.silverxlibra wrote: ↑Wed Nov 28, 2018 7:49 pmOne wouldn't qualify for naturalisation after 3 years of living in the UK under the Surinder Singh route. To apply for citizenship you need to show that you're free from immigration restrictions - to hold a permanent residence card in this case. You wouldn't be issued with a PR card unless you've been living in the UK for 5 years. So PR first, then naturalisation immediately after if you're married to a British citizen.
Correct, all routes to ILR or PR is 5 years, eea and UK immigration routes.silverxlibra wrote: ↑Wed Nov 28, 2018 8:31 pmhttps://www.gov.uk/british-citizenship tells us the following:
You may be able to apply as the spouse or civil partner of a British citizen instead. You need to have lived in the UK for the last 3 years and have either:
• indefinite leave to remain
• a permanent residence document (if you’re from the EEA)
So you're absolutely right as far as the question in this thread goes: you need to show you have lived in the UK for the past 3 years if you're a spouse of a British citizen.
I was wrong in my reading of the question itself. But essentially in many, if not most cases, this 3 year qualifying period would be meaningless since you still have to have PR, and it cannot be earned without having lived here for 5 years.
Many get confused by this. Some even think it is a case of their spouse must have been British for 3 years, which is also not the case. It is being a spouse of a British citizen on the date of application even if the British spouse only became British one day previously.silverxlibra wrote: ↑Wed Nov 28, 2018 8:53 pmI was beginning to questing my sanity and immigration history, thinking 'am I an idiot and did I somehow miss the fact that I could have qualified for citizenship 2 years ago?'Clarity at last, and thank you for shedding light on the history of this thing.