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Hi Jambo,Jambo wrote:Are you the EEA national ("sponsor") or the non EEA national (family member) ?
If you are the EEA national, form EEA1 needs to be used for yourself not EEA2 (which is for non EEA family members)
If you are the non EEA national, what you do is irrelevant. It's the activities of the EEA national that matters.
Assuming the EEA national is exercising treaty rights, the non EEA can travel in and out as much as he wishes even without EEA FP assuming he is a non-visa national. If he is a visa national, he will have problems getting on a flight (even if accompany by the EEA national) as the airline will not let him board. The immigration officer in the UK would let him in (with or without the EEA national) if he can prove the EEA national is exercising treaty rights (so carrying a copy of the marriage certificate and a payslip). The difficulty is getting to the border.FlyLw wrote: 1. The non EEA family member can accompany the EEA National (as long as he's exercising his Treaty Rights) even 1, 2, 5 yrs after the expiration of the EEA FP.
Correct. (as long as the EEA national is exercising treaty rights).2. The only purpose of the EEA FP is to have a visa to enter the country. Once entered, even if the FP expires, the non EEA family member can legally stay in the country.
Correct. The rights are not affected whether you have a RC or not.3. The EEA2 Residence Card is for convenience purposes (and travel) only.
full time or part-time workers don't need CSI.4. There is no comprehensive insurance requirement if the EEA national is working full-time in the UK.
The experience from the forum is that it less likely to get refused if applied as a worker. If you can afford to wait (i.e. no immediate need for RC for travel or to prove eligibility for employment), I would wait.All in all, is your expert advice to wait until I've found employment and then apply for the EEA2 RC?
The HO confirms that on the date of issue you have been living under the EEA regulations based on evidence related to your circumstances when you submitted the application. The HO assumes the circumstances haven't changed and that you will notify them of any change. Sometimes they check if the circumstances have changed.FlyLw wrote:Just to do the topic title justice (for the benefit of other members who might have a similar question): does the UKBA take into consideration the circumstances of the application on the date it was signed, submitted, and received or when they actually process it (e.g. 3 months later)?