Post
by eniseg » Thu Jun 09, 2016 9:34 pm
Hi Bart,
My Australian husband and I (German student in UK) have not yet received the answer for our Family Permit application, so take the information with a grain of salt.
You need:
both your passports,
your marriage certificate,
that's it.
I think. If you are traveling together, double-check the requirements for health insurance, I'm not 100% sure.
I would recommend that you write a letter of support for your wife:
"Dear Sir or Madam,
I am Bart, the Polish husband of Thai citizen Jane Smith, as evidenced by our marriage certificate and my Polish passport, included for your convenience.
We are planning to travel to the UK together in August 2016. Under Regulations (insert paragraphs etc.), my wife Jane Smith may accompany me on this trip. We kindly request that you issue her with a Family Permit under the Directive (insert name/numbers)."
If you are worried that your relationship may not be seen as genuine, you can include some photographs and some travel documents together, for example train tickets, flight tickets, hotel rooms. I have also read that including statements from your friends and family members helps. Maybe I would make a copy of the friend's / family member's passport and state the relationship, for example "I include a statement from my brother-in-law, John Smith, and along with a copy of his passport. John was the witness at our wedding and....".
One thing I need to point out: with June 23, i.e. the British referendum, this law may change, and very soon. I have spoken to some immigration advisors in the UK and I've been told that it will not affect the family permit law at all by one, and that the family permit may no longer be granted after June 23 by another. Part of Cameron's EU deal was having more control over the spouses of EU citizens. Nobody seems to know what is happening.