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Normal Naturalisation
Have had a period of 365 days* (1 year) continuous reckonable residence in the State immediately before the date of your application for naturalisation and, during the 8 years preceding that, have had a total reckonable residence in the State amounting to 1,460 days* (4 years). Altogether you must have 5 years (5 x 365 days*) reckonable residence out of the last 9 years
Naturalisation as spouse or civil partner of an Irish citizen
You must have had a period of 1 year's continuous reckonable residence - in the island of Ireland immediately before the date of your application
You must have been living on the island of Ireland for at least 2 of the 4 years before that year of continuous residence
The law says, the only requirement for continuous residence is in the last year.walrusgumble wrote:If department notice exit stamps on your passport for 3-4 minute, they are going to question your compliance with continuous residence. you need to try and refrain from being out of the country for more than 3 months in any giving year before sending the application.
That is correct, the last year.acme4242 wrote:The law says, the only requirement for continuous residence is in the last year.walrusgumble wrote:If department notice exit stamps on your passport for 3-4 minute, they are going to question your compliance with continuous residence. you need to try and refrain from being out of the country for more than 3 months in any giving year before sending the application.
Its very clear, are the Dept in compliance with the written law ?
1. Whatever period of "registered residency" the GNIB have on their records. You probably could write to the GNIB to seek a letter of residency. That is what the department looks at. If there are stamps on the passport, they will look at that too.nightowl wrote:Thanks for the comprehensive reply walrusgrumble!
Just two follow-up questions:
1) How do they calculate exactly how much time you spend outside Ireland since there are no exit stamps given in Dublin airport, only entry stamps? Do they have a system of information they receive from airlines?
2) I'm Irish, and my husband needs visas for UK, Schengen USA etc. As he is currently doing his PhD, he needs to travel abroad to attend academic conferences and since he has the free time, we travel abroad to visit friends and family - we won't have that freedom when he has a 'normal job'. At the rate we're going that will translate into around 2 passports full of stamps and visas. Do we get any opportunity to explain this? Are they likely at all to be human and understanding?
3) Are they more likely to be understanding for an application that is the spouse of an Irish national? My husband clearly has a strong link to Ireland