- * got my non-irish passport back from INIS.
* yes, i can come back to Ireland with my non-irish passport
* my e-vetting disclosure has been opened by INIS last month(not sure if this one is relevant to my question)
Thanks in advance.
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
Lxndr wrote: ↑Fri May 20, 2022 3:04 pmHere are a bit more details about the status of my application:For home many days can leave Ireland if possible at all?
- * got my non-irish passport back from INIS.
* yes, i can come back to Ireland with my non-irish passport
* my e-vetting disclosure has been opened by INIS last month(not sure if this one is relevant to my question)
Thanks in advance.
Just double-checking: you applied for Irish citizenship some time ago. As you were waiting for your citizenship approval you went on a holiday sometime between March and April, and after that you got the approval for the irish citizenship and no questions asked about your absence from ROI.
I've asked the same question the immigration office and they gave me the most ambiguous possible answer. That's where the concern is coming from. I just don't want to make a mistake right before the finish line. Better safe than sorry.littlerr wrote: ↑Sun May 22, 2022 4:16 amI don’t understand what you want people to confirm here. The rules are black-and-white. If you leave the state for more than 6 weeks in a year after applying for naturalisation, you need to inform the Citizenship team and explain the reason; otherwise you don’t need to inform them. Simple as that.
actually, no, it's not black and white.littlerr wrote: ↑Sun May 22, 2022 4:16 amI don’t understand what you want people to confirm here. The rules are black-and-white. If you leave the state for more than 6 weeks in a year after applying for naturalisation, you need to inform the Citizenship team and explain the reason; otherwise you don’t need to inform them. Simple as that.
there is no one with experience about this, everyone has their own take from this rule. Some says it's calendar year, and some says it's a year after your first stamp on your passport or after your citizenship application. INIS is really vague about this and they don't have a proper explanation.ep00 wrote: ↑Sun May 22, 2022 11:17 amactually, no, it's not black and white.littlerr wrote: ↑Sun May 22, 2022 4:16 amI don’t understand what you want people to confirm here. The rules are black-and-white. If you leave the state for more than 6 weeks in a year after applying for naturalisation, you need to inform the Citizenship team and explain the reason; otherwise you don’t need to inform them. Simple as that.
e.g
- what is "a year"?
calendar year? rolling period from date of application?
- "explain the reason"
this means its completely fine to be gone more than 6 weeks, so long as you notify them?
it's only ok in extenuating circumstances?
this applies to all applications or excludes spousal?
some reasons are ok but others are not?
all on a case by case basis, but regardless you jeopardise your application by going on holiday?
there's more, but this shows it's not black and white, these statements are ill defined and telling someone who asks for clarification that it's black and white is not helpful.
id love to hear from people who have some experience with this.
No. I said: My application is still on and still waiting for approval, i asked my solicitor if i can travel and she said yes. I travelled out of Ireland for 2 weeks and it's fine.Lxndr wrote: ↑Sat May 21, 2022 4:09 pmJust double-checking: you applied for Irish citizenship some time ago. As you were waiting for your citizenship approval you went on a holiday sometime between March and April, and after that you got the approval for the irish citizenship and no questions asked about your absence from ROI.