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Sofia14 wrote:Hi everyone! Yesterday my solicitor called me with a great news, EEA1 and EEA2 was granted. We applied on 1st of September and received COA with right to work 10 days after. I am extremely happy and already planing to go home non eu country for couple of weeks. I go by myself ( my husband may visit me there for a week) but I will probably come back to UK on my own.
Please guys who already travelled with RC what do I need to take with me to airport on my way back? Do I need to have our marriage certificate and my husband payslips with me? Also what queue I need to take non eu or eu? Do I need to feel landing card?
Please advice! Thanks in advance:)
I travel back into the UK routinely using my EEA2 RC, as recently as last night at Heathrow T1. Here's what I recommend:Sofia14 wrote:Please guys who already travelled with RC what do I need to take with me to airport on my way back? Do I need to have our marriage certificate and my husband payslips with me? Also what queue I need to take non eu or eu? Do I need to feel landing card?
Thank you very much for prompt and detailed response. Really appreciate that.GMB wrote:I travel back into the UK routinely using my EEA2 RC, as recently as last night at Heathrow T1. Here's what I recommend:Sofia14 wrote:Please guys who already travelled with RC what do I need to take with me to airport on my way back? Do I need to have our marriage certificate and my husband payslips with me? Also what queue I need to take non eu or eu? Do I need to feel landing card?
1. What to present: besides your EEA RC and passport, you do not need to present anything to the immigration officer. Landing card is not required.
2. What to have with you: I always have my marriage certificate and spouse's employment letter just on the 1 in a million chance I lose my RC while away and need to re-enter the UK without it. I would never actually show that to the IO unless there was a specific reason to do so.
3. Which queue: whichever one you think will be quickest. With an EEA RC you're in the unique position of being able to pick either one. This is whether your spouse is with you or not. I mostly travel solo and use the EU queue 90% of the time. Regardless of the queue you pick, the landing card is never required. One recommendation: if you use the EU queue, when you hand your passport to the IO, say "I'm entering on an EEA residence card." This will head-off them saying "your in the wrong queue" when they see a non-EEA passport.