Hello there, I'm wondering if anyone else has faced this situation or could help out. I'm currently in the U.S. applying for my son's British passport. My son was born in the U.S. and I'm a dual UK/US citizen. Dad is US citizen only.
I was born in the UK in 1984 and have a British passport; my parents had ILR at the time of my birth. I thought that I only needed to show my birth certificate/passport to pass my citizenship down to my son as I was born in the U.K. However, the passport office is asking for proof of my parent's ILR at the time of my birth, which was in 1984. We do have my parents' 40 year old passports (luckily!!!) with the stamps, but they are in extremely fragile condition and I am afraid they will not survive the courier trip from the US to the UK. In addition, if they got lost, we would lose the only proof we have right now of my son's citizenship. We did ask if they would accept a notarized copy of the grandparents passport and they said no.
My questions are:
They suggested my son could just enter the UK on his US passport on a tourist visa and then apply from within the UK for a passport. They said we probably won't have to show these requirement from applying from within the UK for some reason. However, he'd be travelling with my husband, who will be entering the UK on a spouse visa. I'd be entering the UK on my British passport at the same time (we are all planning on moving to the UK this June). Is this going to look dodgy to passport control, or somehow get us in trouble at the border?
Is there any other way to get proof of my son's right to British citizenship, other than taking the risk of sending in the grandparents' passports with the ILR stamp?
Thank you so much, I'd really appreciate any help or suggestions anyone can offer!
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