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great!Jambo wrote:Are you married? Married partner enjoy automatic right to reside with their EEA partner so she can't really overstay.
You can apply now for your wife's residence card later for the children ones. It doesn't need to be all in one go. The downside is that you might to provide your passport twice but if you also apply now for a Residence Certificate (EEA1), the HO might be satisfy with your certificate only as they have seen your passport already.
No Jambo didn't know that at all, really? wow for some reason, I thought the kids had no rights to a faster route if a parent was British by Descent.Jambo wrote:Should be fine applying twice.
BTW - are you British by decent and that is why your children are not British? I guess already know that if this is the case, then after living in the UK for 3 years (with absences less than 270 days) then can apply to register as British citizens.
Thanks for the link.Jambo wrote:The path for citizenship for children is different from adult. It's also called Registration rather than Naturalisation.
As your wife is using the EEA route, she would be able to apply for BC once she is granted PR status after 5 years.
Your children could apply for registration as BC under section 3(5). See more details here. Pay attention to the absence requirements. The HO has no discretion about this.