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You got sound advice from the HO. You cannot expect to be free to hop-a-skip-a-jump between EU law and UK law as and when it suits.Now we have been married for over 2 years, and I want to get ILR and eventually citizenship. I have been informed by the Home Office that despite the fact I am married to a British citizen it is irrelvant and that I will have to apply for the dreaded EEA4, which will take months, because I have the EEA2 stamped in the passport.
Is it impossible to apply for any form of ILR other than EEA4? I will have been in the UK for 5 years at the beginning of next year, but the Home Office said that it didn't matter, and that I still had to go down the EEA4 route rather than SET(M), which can be done in a day, rather than over 6 months.
It just feels as though as a couple we are being denied the rights that are given to other British citizens with foreign partners, and that in the long run, the naturalisation for my partner was a waste of time.
No. Anytime spent (before marriage to your spouse) under UK immigration rules (work permits, HSMPs, student) doesn't count towards the residency qualifying period under EU law. Your residency qualifying period started from the moment you and your EU spouse got married (and began living) in the UK. When was this? Count 5 years from then = qualification for PR (not from when your RC was issued).robnmc wrote:Actually I just noticed something - the EEA4 form states that you need to have been living in the UK with an EEA national for a continous period of 5 years.
Does this mean that the 3 years I spent in the UK before I got married does not apply
If you were NOT married to your EU spouse while on your work permit, then yes. But why should it? The UK route and EU route are for the most part non-interchangeable.so that I will have to wait 3 years work permit plus 5 years of EEA2 permit = total 8 years before I can get PR in the UK?
Naturalisation for your partner still means that you don't have to wait 1 year after you get ILR/PR - at least under current naturalisation rules, which may change.robnmc wrote:I was living in the UK on a work permit when I met my partner. He is Italian and had been in the UK for nearly 20 years, but had never bothered becoming naturalised.
We married at about the same time that he finally applied for British citizenship, but because it had still not been granted, I then got an EEA2 permit, as I wanted to change employment and this gave me the flexibility to do so.
Now we have been married for over 2 years, and I want to get ILR and eventually citizenship. I have been informed by the Home Office that despite the fact I am married to a British citizen it is irrelvant and that I will have to apply for the dreaded EEA4, which will take months, because I have the EEA2 stamped in the passport.
Is it impossible to apply for any form of ILR other than EEA4? I will have been in the UK for 5 years at the beginning of next year, but the Home Office said that it didn't matter, and that I still had to go down the EEA4 route rather than SET(M), which can be done in a day, rather than over 6 months.
It just feels as though as a couple we are being denied the rights that are given to other British citizens with foreign partners, and that in the long run, the naturalisation for my partner was a waste of time.
hamadauk123 wrote:thanks jaj also any idea where i can get application form for naturalization ? thanks
hi jaj can,t find which application i need to apply for citizenship i called home office to request it she said which citizenship application you need i said i don't know i called again to know which one i need. they take ages to answer the phone. well i,m noon EEA NATIONAL i,m holding pr under EEA regulation .so which type citizenship application i need? thanks for any help.JAJ wrote:hamadauk123 wrote:thanks jaj also any idea where i can get application form for naturalization ? thanks
http://www.bia.homeoffice.gov.uk/britishcitizenship/
I agree. The EU route to permanent residency will be unaffected by the future changes to the immigration and nationality law. Therefore one can 'rest easy' for 5 years which is not such a long time as one may think!While I do agree that the right thing to have done 2 years ago is to have applied for a spouse visa, considering that you have only 3 years to go, the pros of currently switiching to the UK immigration route is debated. Add to the mix that the UK immigration system is undergoing wide reforms, while the EEA2 gives visa free travel to some EEA countries which have executed the Directive, I would personally prefer continue in the "cult status"!