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No mention of a 2 year wait there. I did inform them that we will have 1 year of a relationship when we get married.She should apply for a D join spouse visa and if successful then one she
arrives in the State both of you should attend your local Immigration
office ( if residing in Dublin you attend the Garda National Immigration
Bureau, 13/14 Burgh Quay Dublin 2 or your local garda station if residing
outside the greater Dublin area) to enable her register as the spouse of an
Irish national. You take both your passports, marriage certificate and
translation if necessary and evidence of address. She will then be issued
with a registration card/stamp 4 which will allow her enter employment
without the need of a work permit or set up a business in the State without
the consent of the Minister. Her passport will be endorsed to reflect this.
There is no fee as the spouse of an Irish national. This permission will be
for one year which is renewable once you attend together and provide
evidence of joint address and she abides by the laws of the State. Visa
applications can take up to 6 weeks to process.
However if she is granted a C visit visa then she would have to make an
application to this section and those applications are done in
chronological order by the month they are received and currently they take
6/9 months to process. She would be unable to work during this time and
would become an illegal in the State once her 90 days has expired but would
not be deported once she would have an application pending with this
section.
I actually think you should sue the staff that gave you the information about having to wait for 2 years. Such law does not exist anywhere as far as I know.Irishman30 wrote:No mention of a 2 year wait there. I did inform them that we will have 1 year of a relationship when we get married.
There seems to be a case of conflicting information at times, that makes all this so frustration.
So I am confused here. That fact if we give the indication that she wants to apply to stay in the State might be seen as negative from the Visa Officer's point of view?Evidence that you will be accompanying your spouse – e.g. return airline/ferry tickets in both names.
If you wish to accompany your Irish spouse/EU spouse on a visit to Ireland, and you are both returning to your country of residence following your visit, the documentation listed above is required
Yes this is normally for first timers arriving in Ireland. It is necessary for them to take a photo of you if you're arriving from a Non-EU country for the first time.Irishman30 wrote:He took a photo of my wife - I assume this is for immigration purposes...... wasn't expecting this. Is this the norm
Ah ok. That's fine. Didn't see people in the queue ahead of us getting their photo taken so was wondering the reason. Makes sense.IntegratedMigrant wrote:Yes this is normally for first timers arriving in Ireland. It is necessary for them to take a photo of you if you're arriving from a Non-EU country for the first time.Irishman30 wrote:He took a photo of my wife - I assume this is for immigration purposes...... wasn't expecting this. Is this the norm
Thanks, happy its all sorted and she's here.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:@ Irishman30, I would complain about the quality of the visa and the issues it caused. Good to hear of your success.