- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
Hi Eusmile,EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:From what you posted, you may struggle to demonstrate that you are in a durable relationship.
It is worth studying this document (page 4 in particular).
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/Lex ... FIN:NL:PDF
I would have hoped that it will help, but remember, demonstrating that one is a durable relationship is more difficult than for those that are married.joost wrote: Would successfully fighting this tourist visa refusal from the inis.gov office two years ago, "we we proofed our relationship", help us in any way now?
HI Jeupsy thank you for your feedback in this post and my other post.jeupsy wrote:The fact that you never lived together will definitely make the case harder.
One thing that will be very important is to show that you have met face to face on a regular basis (they definitely don't accept long distances relationships where people have never met). If you have some kind of evidence than she stayed at your house when she came to Ireland and your stayed at hers when you went to Mauritius, it would definitely be a good point to have.
And since you have not any proof of living together, your only chance to prove a genuine relationship will unfortunately involve giving some private information to them.
Here are some suggestions of things to provide:
- Letters from friends and family to testify of the relationship (preferably from people who have met the both of you together)
- Pictures of both of you together at different places and different times (and if you have pictures of you with her family and her with your family it is also good)
- If you were talking on the phone, you phone bills which show you have been calling her number on a regular basis (or the other way around)
- When we visited each other, anything which prove that you went to the same place at the same time (passport stamps/visas, plan/train/bus tickets, receipts for concerts or any activity which have your names on it)
- If you gave each other present and can provide the receipts and show that they were purchased just before going to each other's country it is also useful
- Same thing if you still have cards sent to each other, ideally with the envelopes and stamps showing when they were sent
- Also you can provide an printout of all the emails you have exchanged (you can remove what is too private and you don't want to share, but still leave enough so that the whole thing makes sense and it makes it obvious that you are a couple)
The tourist visa might work as well ... But just in case you didn't know she can also apply for an EUTR applicant visa (which would be the more "normal" visa to apply for in her situation).
The visa processing should be faster, free of charge, and they are not supposed to ask for bank statements, proofs of insurance or that kind of things.
However they will expect a proof that you are working or studying in Ireland, a copy of you passport, and detailed documentation of you relationship going back at least 2 years (which you will also need to apply for the residence card anyway).
Also the EUTR applicant visa will be multi entry for 3 or 6 months, so probably more convenient if you guys want to travel once she is in Ireland.
Thats great information, thank you. I also agree with your opinion if they approve the entry visa i wouldn't see why they would U-turn for a residence card.jeupsy wrote:Have a look here under "Partner - Qualifying Family Members who wish to JOIN EU Citizen in Ireland".
When she does the online visa application under the reason for travel she should pick "Join partner (EEA national)".
If she does that instead of a tourist they will treat her as someone who is coming to Ireland in order to apply for an EUTR residence card. This means that if they are not convinced the relationship is genuine they will refuse the visa, so you need to make sure it is well documented. But otherwise it is better than the tourist visa as they will give a longer one which will definitely give you enough time to make the EUTR application when she comes to Ireland, and she will not have to be stressed about giving the real answer if the border control officer asks why she is coming to Ireland. And this is just me but I think that once they have approved the visa as an EUTR applicant then they are unlikely to make a u-turn and refuse the residence card when you apply for it.
Hope this helps (let me know if any question, my girlfriend did the last year so I have a fairly good idea of how the application process works)
jeupsy wrote:Have a look here under "Partner - Qualifying Family Members who wish to JOIN EU Citizen in Ireland".
When she does the online visa application under the reason for travel she should pick "Join partner (EEA national)".
If she does that instead of a tourist they will treat her as someone who is coming to Ireland in order to apply for an EUTR residence card. This means that if they are not convinced the relationship is genuine they will refuse the visa, so you need to make sure it is well documented. But otherwise it is better than the tourist visa as they will give a longer one which will definitely give you enough time to make the EUTR application when she comes to Ireland, and she will not have to be stressed about giving the real answer if the border control officer asks why she is coming to Ireland. And this is just me but I think that once they have approved the visa as an EUTR applicant then they are unlikely to make a u-turn and refuse the residence card when you apply for it.
Hope this helps (let me know if any question, my girlfriend did the last year so I have a fairly good idea of how the application process works)
Estate agents have always asked for PPS numbers when I rented apartments ... But not sure whether it is a legal requirement or something they just decided to do.joost wrote:If she gets the eutreaty entry visa, can she then get a PPS number straight away or can she only get a PPS number after she gets the temp 4eufam stamp?
Also is a PPS number required to co-sign a new rental agreement with me?
Thanks!
In some cases partner means same sex partner who entered a civil partnership with you in a country where it is considered to be the same thing as marriage (so basically it is to treat gay couples in a civil partnership equally with married couples).joeyjoejoe wrote:Hi jepsy,
First of all thanks for your info, I'm in the situation of trying to get my non EEA girlfriend over. I also thought it made more sense for us to apply for a long stay 'join partner' visa. Now it got refused so I'm about to make the appeal, I realise now I did not supply enough documentation. Whats confusing me though is the following problem. 'Applicant does not qualify for join partner visa'. I looked more closely at the INIS site and its definition of 'partner' is a same gender partnership. But since you did not have this problem then I'm tieing myself up in even more knots. Thanks for any help, much appreciated.
Here are the two reasonsjeupsy wrote:In some cases partner means same gender partner who entered a civil partnership with you in a country where it is considered to be the same thing as marriage (so basically it is to treat gay couples in a civil partnership equally with married couples).joeyjoejoe wrote:Hi jepsy,
First of all thanks for your info, I'm in the situation of trying to get my non EEA girlfriend over. I also thought it made more sense for us to apply for a long stay 'join partner' visa. Now it got refused so I'm about to make the appeal, I realise now I did not supply enough documentation. Whats confusing me though is the following problem. 'Applicant does not qualify for join partner visa'. I looked more closely at the INIS site and its definition of 'partner' is a same gender partnership. But since you did not have this problem then I'm tieing myself up in even more knots. Thanks for any help, much appreciated.
However in this case and as long as you are an EU citizen but not Irish, EU directive 2004/38 applies to you and clearly includes unmarried partner of opposite sexes who have been in a lasting relationship (and the transposition of the directive into Irish law defines "lasting" as at least 2 years). I think they probably refused the visa for another reason than this, or if they did expect you to be a same gender couple it was a mistake.
Difficult to say without more details, but if you want to be a bit more specific about your situation, we can try to guess why it was refused.
We have applied for a entry visa and stating in the application that we intend to apple for a residence card under eutreaty. I lodged her application in person at the inis office in Dublin. This has been 6 weeks ago and I haven't heard anything.jeupsy wrote:No worries, I know that before you actually go through the process it is difficult to find out how it works
In theory a visa under Treaty Rights should be processed within two weeks and free of charge.
In practise in our case they asked us to pay 60 euros and it took 2 months. The reason is that the guy from the embassy who took the application didn't know the process and treated the application as a normal request to join a partner (not an EUTR one). So he made us pay, asked for bank statements which he wasn't supposed to, and sent the application to Dublin for review which always takes 6 to 8 weeks.
I am sure he was wrong as I know someone who used to work at the visa section of an Irish embassy who confirmed to me that for EUTR visas they should't charge anything and in order to expedite the process they are supposed to make a decision at the embassy within 2 weeks instead of forwarding the application to Dublin.
But at the time, after I told the guy and saw that he didn't seem to know the rules; we thought there was no point in trying to fight the embassy as it would bring more hassle; and we just gave them what they asked for.
Hopefully yours will be processed by someone who knows what they are doing
Sorry joost, I though visa applications could only be made in the country where the person resides and not in Ireland. So I am not sure how things work here. But certainly if you are still waiting for a visa after over a month, you can try to get help from solvit to escalate the matter, as it is starting to be a bit too long,joost wrote:
We have applied for a entry visa and stating in the application that we intend to apple for a residence card under eutreaty. I lodged her application in person at the inis office in Dublin. This has been 6 weeks ago and I haven't heard anything.
Is there anything i can do to get them to speed it up? I send an email to visamail@justice.ie but haven't received an answer.
Thanks,
Joost
I am another French with a girlfriend from Asiamiamiheat wrote:Hello,
I am reading all your posts with great interest. Will probably need to read a few more times to absorb all the useful info.
I am appealing to the opinion of the ones who did go / or are going through the process of having their "exotic" (I mean that in good humour) girlfriend/boyfriend immigrate to Ireland to live with them.
More particularly I am French living and working in Dublin. I met a Thai woman last year on a holiday. Since then we have travelled together to Dubai (2 weeks in October). That was her first visa ever on a brand new passport. Then we got her a tourist visa to come to Ireland. She came and stayed with me for 2 months and has now returned to Thailand. We are in constant communication by Skype and I have loads of evidence (pictures especially) of the different times we spent together. When we applied for her tourist visa it took a lot of time to prepare and then it took 8 weeks to be approved: I had to send in the equivalent of 300-350 pages worth of phones records and Skype, plus bank statements and loads of pictures.
At this stage it is clear to us that we want to live together and I would like to make sure we do things right from the beginning. The goal being that she will live with me. I have the means to support the two of us but it is clear she will want to work at some stage.
My first concerns when I read immigration website or forums:
1. Her country of origin: Thailand.
2. The fact that a soon to be 1 year old relationship may no give us much ground to work on in the eyes of immigration office.
3. I do not want to get the "wrong visa" next, that is the one that makes more permanent solutions more difficult in the long run.
I appeal to your experience and I am very eager to hear any advice you may give me.
Thank you for reading.
I received an reply from INIS saying:jeupsy wrote:Sorry joost, I though visa applications could only be made in the country where the person resides and not in Ireland. So I am not sure how things work here. But certainly if you are still waiting for a visa after over a month, you can try to get help from solvit to escalate the matter, as it is starting to be a bit too long,joost wrote:
We have applied for a entry visa and stating in the application that we intend to apple for a residence card under eutreaty. I lodged her application in person at the inis office in Dublin. This has been 6 weeks ago and I haven't heard anything.
Is there anything i can do to get them to speed it up? I send an email to visamail@justice.ie but haven't received an answer.
Thanks,
Joost