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Senior member will help you. I don't know much about this Citizenship lawosiris wrote:Hi
Just wanted to post my experience and am seeking member advice if possible:
Arrived in UK June 2006.
Me (Canadian), my EEA partner (Irish)
Applied for EEA 1 and 2 - approved and received in Feb 2007
We got married in July 2009
Applied for EEA3 and 4 - received in March 2013
Passed Life in UK test and applied for Citizenship at local Nationality Checking Service. (Myself only not my wife)
Was asked to provide 5 years of P60 to prove still exercising treaty rights (even though EEA 3 and 4 already granted).
The officer at the NCS rang the UKBA Home Office and spoke to her contact.
Apparently, as we have only been married for 4 years, I will have to wait 1 year after the date of EEA4 being issued in order to apply for citizenship.
I thought that as Permanent Residence status was already granted automatically in Feb 2012, I was eligible to apply?
We asked the NCS officer a hypothetical question "What if we were not married"? - The NCS officer said that she did not know the answer to that question.
Just wanted to seek forum advice to see whether I am eligible to apply for citizenship now?
Thanks in advance
They are confused.facts wrote:osiris wrote:I was asked to bring my wife alongClearly, your NCS officer is not a competent person.osiris wrote:The NCS officer said that she did not know the answer to that question.
Write a covering letter clearly illustrating your eligibility and ask again.
Its after five years of excersising treaty rights. Durable partners dont get the right automatically granted, etc. so if they didnt apply for the EEA2 before marriage then there could of been problems (although A Family permit could of helped establish excersising treaty rights).askmeplz82 wrote: - how you applied for EEA4 after 4 years marriage ? normally it's 5 years after marriage.
the home office require you to show two years of living together - this can be in another country - and for the purpose of an eea moving to the uk, would beaskmeplz82 wrote: - and How did you apply for EEA2 after 1 year arriving in the UK ? you married your EU national wife in 2009
the reason i'm asking this because i think you need to live together for 2 years before you can apply for EEA2 if applying as unmarried partner
wiggsy wrote:Its after five years of excersising treaty rights. Durable partners dont get the right automatically granted, etc. so if they didnt apply for the EEA2 before marriage then there could of been problems (although A Family permit could of helped establish excersising treaty rights).askmeplz82 wrote: - how you applied for EEA4 after 4 years marriage ? normally it's 5 years after marriage.
If the non-eea entered on say an Immigration Rules visitor visa, then the five years would of started on date of marriage etc - as the home office accepted their durable relationship, then PR starts on the date of application. (not on the date of RC issue) [whether this includes the family permit im unsure]
the home office require you to show two years of living together - this can be in another country - and for the purpose of an eea moving to the uk, would beaskmeplz82 wrote: - and How did you apply for EEA2 after 1 year arriving in the UK ? you married your EU national wife in 2009
the reason i'm asking this because i think you need to live together for 2 years before you can apply for EEA2 if applying as unmarried partner
Even in my wife's first visa application (as an unmarried partner) the home office didn't argue our subsisting relationship, despite it falling short of the two years - two years is a guideline, but other circumstances (family / kids / etc) needs to be taken into account.
@ OP.
you gained PR at feb 2012 at the latest. The home office have accepted this by issuing the PR card.
You do not get PR at the date of issue. the card simply confirms the right you already hold.
You need to have 1 year of unrestricted visa = feb 2013.
you are elegible for citizenship on THAT basis (cant confirm on other basis)
Naturalisation: Standard Requirements
scroll to the EEA section