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If parents were settled (acquired PR) or became British before children were born in UK then they are British.Liludiamond wrote:Hello
I have a question regarding my kids status. We are polish couple living in UK for last 11 years. We have two kids, 10 and 8, both born in uk. We got our uk citizenship 3 years ago and now hold dual polish english citizenship. At that time we didn't naturalise our kids so they only hold polish passports. My question is: do we need to naturalise or register them as british citizens first before applying for british pasport (2grants) or maybe they are british, if we are, and therefore we can save some money and apply for passport without registration?
Do you mean 'born before' noajthan??noajthan wrote:if children were born after parents became settled (acquired PR), register them as citizens first.
Oops yes: born before...CR001 wrote:Do you mean 'born before' noajthan??noajthan wrote:if children were born after parents became settled (acquired PR), register them as citizens first.
Working paying tax etc is not being 'settled' it is the initial exercising of treaty rights as a qualified person.Liludiamond wrote:They were born before we became British, however we were settled from the start, working, paying taxes etc.
If you arrived in UK in 2005 you may have acquired PR as early as 2010.Liludiamond wrote:I see, Is that permit to remain? I always assumed eu nationals don't need to have a permit. To be honest we were never asked about permit. Polish passport was enought, we always worked, rent, buy property, study, so just hoping we were "setteled". Even applying for NI was quite straightforward 10 years ago.
I just really want to save this 2 grants,
And what was the status of your children's other parent? British or settledbaddy wrote:There is no argument on this at all. They are British already. Apply for their passports straightaway. No need to register them at all.
My personal experience:: My two children were born in the UK even when all I had was just a visitor's visa. When I applied for ILR in October 2011, I includd them on my application, but they returned their Fees and cancelled their application. They only gave me the ILR. And they wrote me that my Children were qualified to be registered as British.
But in your own case, you have gone a step above my condition then. You have British Citizenship, all you need to do is apply for their passports and Include their UK issued Birth Certificates.
This says it all:baddy wrote:There is no argument on this at all. They are British already. Apply for their passports straightaway. No need to register them at all.
My personal experience:: My two children were born in the UK even when all I had was just a visitor's visa. When I applied for ILR in October 2011, I includd them on my application, but they returned their Fees and cancelled their application. They only gave me the ILR. And they wrote me that my Children were qualified to be registered as British.
But in your own case, you have gone a step above my condition then. You have British Citizenship, all you need to do is apply for their passports and Include their UK issued Birth Certificates.
they wrote me that my Children were qualified to be registered as British
And how did you come to this conclusion? The information you are giving out seems wrong to me.There is no argument on this at all. They are British already. Apply for their passports straightaway. No need to register them at all.
No, as children were born before you were even settled they do not 'inherit' anything.Liludiamond wrote:So the fact me and my husband are british does not change anything?
Form MN1 and £936 per child. Simples.(3)A person born in the United Kingdom after commencement who is not a British citizen by virtue of subsection (1) [F7, (1A)] or (2) shall be entitled to be registered as a British citizen if, while he is a minor—
(a)his father or mother becomes a British citizen or becomes settled in the United Kingdom; and
(b)an application is made for his registration as a British citizen.