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I will not bore you with the details, but sometimes including extra information can in fact be used against you. I doubt this will happen in your case.brandy79 wrote:I know legally I don't have to but surely it can't hurt?
brandy79 wrote:I have got myself a full-time job with a 12 month contract in Dublin paying a good salary.
So I can now include my job offer within my husband's visa application.
I am so happy right now!!
Getting a job like this during a recession was not easy!!
brandy79 wrote: thank you! Jobs.ie is a good site.
It is your personal choice what you are happy to accept. I was willing to do most jobs as long as it fulfilled visa conditions for my husband to come. I mean your first job may not be your dream job , but it is a start. Once your in a job you can search for better.
I worked in a bar one night, you have to be flexible.
Dublin and GalwAy are best for work. Good luck!
In the case of a job it should be fine.brandy79 wrote:How can applying for visa with Eu spouse in employment be a negative thing? Seriously if it was deemed negative then the world has gone mad! :shock: :shock:
Does one need to have a bank statement? Can the payslip and p60 be sufficient? Online it states that a 6months bank statement is necessary.Brigid from Ireland wrote:You need:
Valid original marriage cert (translated if necessary)
Copy of your passport
His passport
He applies for a short 3 month visa. Then he travels to Ireland and applies for his pps number straight away. Then near the end of the three months he applies for a long term Stamp4EU fam and for this you show your payslip. A bar job working 8 hours per week is fine, as this is a payslip showing you are an employed EU citizen exercising migrant worker rights.
Your husband's rights are based on his marriage to you and the fact that you work - he does not need a letter from your parents.
The other good news - once he has his stamp4EUfam you (not him) can apply for a 'top up' from social welfare, to bring you up to the income of 188 for you and 124 for him, per week. So if your income is different each week you get a different amount in the top up each week. This is not easy to get and you will probably have to appeal to get it, but you have a very good chance of success. To do this you go first to social welfare and apply for Jobseekers allowance, then you go to the community welfare officer and apply for supplementary welfare allowance. You may not get jobseekers but you have a great chance of supplementary as it is easier to get than jobseekers. But you must apply for both in order to get the supplementary - long complicated rules.
Interview letters are not relevant, payslips are BIG thing, amount earned or number of hours not really important in the case of him coming to Ireland.
You need no letter from your father and you don't need your dad's bank details. However, when you apply for the 'top up' you will need to say that your father lives in Ireland and you came home to live with him (the bit about coming home to live with dad is important and you should make sure to put this in writing on the Habitual Residence condition form), to take up a bar job here initially and to look for better work as soon as you can get it (it is more advantageous if you came to a job rather than came looking for work, when you want a 'top up' of your income).
So very easy for you, just that you need to keep working.
What exactly does it say? Please send a linkCometoireland wrote:Does one need to have a bank statement? Can the payslip and p60 be sufficient? Online it states that a 6months bank statement is necessary.
Here is the link from INIS. http://www.inis.gov.ie/en/INIS/Pages/Join%20FamilyDirective/2004/38/EC wrote:What exactly does it say? Please send a linkCometoireland wrote:Does one need to have a bank statement? Can the payslip and p60 be sufficient? Online it states that a 6months bank statement is necessary.
Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:http://www.inis.gov.ie/en/INIS/Pages/Jo ... EU_Citizen is the section that applies to non-EU family members of EU citizen. No requirement for bank statement.
Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:If the EU spouse is working in Ireland, then no bank statements are required. I would refuse, and say that it is not legally required.
Was your friend's EU spouse working? Whose bank statements did they request?
Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Whose bank statements did they request?
The only time you can be required to submit something like this is if the EU citizen has been already resident in Ireland for more than 3 months (but less than 5 years), and the EU citizen is considered to be "self-sufficient".
If the Eu citizen is not yet in Ireland, then there is no need for bank statements.
Thanks for posting back. A new thread in isolation was not going to help others in a similar position in future. Hence the attempt to link them together. Keep posting.brandy79 wrote:I searched for original post but was unable to find. Hence reason for new thread. Sure worse crimes have been committed?!
Visa success for Sri lankan husband of eu national. Applied on 8 Aug got decision for join family visa last Wednesday. Less than 3 weeks for decision and passport with visa office in colombo ready for collection Monday or Tuesday. Keep the faith! :)
Hi Brandybrandy79 wrote:I searched for original post but was unable to find. Hence reason for new thread. Sure worse crimes have been committed?!
Visa success for Sri lankan husband of eu national. Applied on 8 Aug got decision for join family visa last Wednesday. Less than 3 weeks for decision and passport with visa office in colombo ready for collection Monday or Tuesday. Keep the faith!