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Is your wife in Croatia now if not what is her immigration status in the UK? Yes she needs to be settled in order to naturalise, that is either have ILR (for a spouse that now takes 5 years) or Permanent Residence/PR which is also a five year process but cheaper and arguably less restrictive than ILR which now has a strict financial requirement and criminality check.Mark.Boats wrote:Hi all
Getting a little ahead of ourselves but it never hurts to plan ahead. Just want to confirm that I'm reading into this correctly and not missing something...
I'm a BC from birth, my fiancée is Croatian, we intend to live permanently in the UK. Croatia will join the EU on 1/7/13 and as my wife she will be exempt from the labour market restrictions.
She is keen to naturalise in the UK, and I'm looking at how we go about it in the future. The situation as I see it is that she needs to meet three basic requirements (as well as the usual good character, sound mind etc etc):
*To have been living in the UK for three years
*To have ILR at the time of application (but not required to have held it for a year)
*To be married to me (obviously!)
Am I reading this correctly? As I see it we have to wait five years before she can get ILR as an EU citizen exercising treaty rights? This is what I've read but on the gov.uk website they don't mention ILR in the section for spouses of British Citizens?
Given our experience so far with the UKBA the only certainties are that it will be frustrating, lengthy and expensive...
I'm not sure if the uk is bringing in special rules for Croatia such as registered work or authorised work? You don't technically need to apply for PR though it helps when applying for naturalisation as it cuts back on paperwork.Mark.Boats wrote:Thanks D4109125
Currently we are both in Croatia yes, we intend to enter the UK under EU free movement rights
I didn't realise the ILR route for spouses was now five years as well - seems like it's just worth waiting five years and applying for Permanent Residence
Is there any potential pitfalls in taking that route? Obviously she'll need to be exercising treaty rights, will she also need comprehensive sickness insurance for the five year period?
From what I understand, there would be no real advantage in your future wife being married to a UK national in terms of citizenship (other than not having to wait six years).Mark.Boats wrote:Hi all
Getting a little ahead of ourselves but it never hurts to plan ahead. Just want to confirm that I'm reading into this correctly and not missing something...
I'm a BC from birth, my fiancée is Croatian, we intend to live permanently in the UK. Croatia will join the EU on 1/7/13 and as my wife she will be exempt from the labour market restrictions.
She is keen to naturalise in the UK, and I'm looking at how we go about it in the future. The situation as I see it is that she needs to meet three basic requirements (as well as the usual good character, sound mind etc etc):
*To have been living in the UK for three years
*To have ILR at the time of application (but not required to have held it for a year)
*To be married to me (obviously!)
Am I reading this correctly? As I see it we have to wait five years before she can get ILR as an EU citizen exercising treaty rights? This is what I've read but on the gov.uk website they don't mention ILR in the section for spouses of British Citizens?
Given our experience so far with the UKBA the only certainties are that it will be frustrating, lengthy and expensive... :lol:
Thanks EUsmileWEallsmileEUsmileWEallsmile wrote:Something to watch out for...she will need to exercise treaty rights for five years (worker, student, self-sufficient - the latter two requiring health insurance).
The fact they didn't refuse the application on your employment doesn't necessary means they approved it or that they will once you apply in the UK.Mark.Boats wrote:As you might remember from my time over in the EEA forum, they only refused our Singh application due to us not being married, tacitly accepting our work abroad as qualifying for a Singh route to the UK...
Yes (and it won't cost you anything to try).Do you think it would be possible to come to the UK in June (or 1st July if they refuse before Croatia accedes), then after marrying at the end of July (in Croatia) apply using the EEA1 form and Singh from within the UK?
Just so you don't think it is just my view.Mark.Boats wrote:Thanks Jambo - I was totally unaware that we could do that
[url=http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitecontent/documents/policyandlaw/ecis/chapter7.pdf?view=Binary]Chapter 7, Section 2:[/url] ACCESSION STATE NATIONALS WHO JOINED IN MAY 2007 (A2 nationals) - page 30 wrote:For spouses or civil partners of a national of an EEA Member State, other than Bulgaria and Romania, who is already exercising a Treaty Right in the United Kingdom, the most appropriate course may be for them to apply as the family member of a person exercising a Treaty Right. The application should be submitted on form EEA1.
Yep.I shall have another look through the EEA1 form
So if I have it right, an application using the EEA1 form would mean we would still have to wait five years for PR but that my wife wouldn't have to demonstrate treaty rights for those five years to qualify?
What were they doing if not working?Raj5 wrote:If the the Romanian national who is married to a British national is not exercising his Treaty rights nor his British wife. Can he apply for the British citizenship after completing 5 years in the UK? He has had Blue registration certificate for 5 years but did not work here. Both have lived in the UK for 5 years but most of the part of their stay they have not worked in the UK.
Well...Mark.Boats wrote:We'll get right on to this as soon as we're back in the UK...
Yes. EEA1.Mark.Boats wrote:Well...Mark.Boats wrote:We'll get right on to this as soon as we're back in the UK...
We're back in the UK, Mr. and Mrs. "Boats" legally...
Now we're looking at forms, is the form EEA1 still the one to use? It seems like it and nothing in the "Croatian Nationals" section of the UKBA website allows us to use Singh to get a worker certificate...
At the time of my working outside the UK we were not married, so I suppose technically the answer to this question is no...5.2 Were you the family member of the UK national at a time when they were exercising treaty rights as a worker or self-employed person in another EEA member state?
Answering No should not change things. See Regulation 9(2)(b).Mark.Boats wrote:Hi Jambo
Thanks again for the help
Just reading through the EEA1 form (the new EEA1 form with the £55 charge attached ) and spotted this question:
At the time of my working outside the UK we were not married, so I suppose technically the answer to this question is no...5.2 Were you the family member of the UK national at a time when they were exercising treaty rights as a worker or self-employed person in another EEA member state?