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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
no they're still unmarriedCR001 wrote:Only a British citizen can apply for Right of Abode.
Did your parents marry at any time after your birth?
Is your father named on your birth certificate?
Likely only in certain circumstances if the child is British by descent, which you are not. Right of abode is not specific to commonwealth countries.paul1976 wrote:I thought right to abode also went for commonwealth citizens with British citizens parents
Person with right of abode wrote:A Commonwealth citizen (not a CUKC) with a parent / adoptive parent who, at the time of the person’s birth / adoption, was a CUKC by birth in the United Kingdom
If your mother was born in the UK, then pehaps you may apply for a CoE-RoA?4.1 Definitions wrote:Parent includes the mother, but not the father, of an illegitimate child. It also includes the adoptive parents of a legally adopted child (see below)
okie dokie , dam parents having bastard children lol ok so my options are have ago at right to abode 50/50 by the rules with mother being born in the UK CoE-RoAvinny wrote:No, you may automatically acquire British citizenship, only if your British father was married to your mother.
oh wow it's only the ceremony cost, that's very acceptable I thought I read some where per adult it was 900+ pounds aswell as the ceremony cost very much relieved lolCR001 wrote:UKM registration (through British mother) or UKF registration (through British father) both cost £80 each.
RoA costs a lot more than this @ £423.
Passport, once British, costs £72.50.
Note that UKM gives British citizenship by descent, as does UKF (in most cases) where the applicant was born outside the United Kingdom. A holder of Right of Abode may become naturalised British after meeting the normal residence requirements and hence be a British citizen otherwise than by descent. A British citizen by descent cannot make an application for naturalisation.CR001 wrote:UKM registration (through British mother) or UKF registration (through British father) both cost £80 each.
RoA costs a lot more than this @ £423.
Unsure why you have quoted my post??JAJ wrote:Note that UKM gives British citizenship by descent, as does UKF (in most cases) where the applicant was born outside the United Kingdom. A holder of Right of Abode may become naturalised British after meeting the normal residence requirements and hence be a British citizen otherwise than by descent. A British citizen by descent cannot make an application for naturalisation.CR001 wrote:UKM registration (through British mother) or UKF registration (through British father) both cost £80 each.
RoA costs a lot more than this @ £423.
The scenario in this thread looks quite similar to http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... grant.html. Which proves that one should never seek advice from the Home Office- they only mentioned the UKM/UKF options for British citizenship after some prompting and the fact that this person has had Right of Abode since birth has been missed completely.
CR001 wrote: Unsure why you have quoted my post??
But the OP is not British due to being born pre 1983 outside the UK to parents who were/are not married.JAJ wrote:CR001 wrote: Unsure why you have quoted my post??
A person who is entitled to both a Certificate of Entitlement to Right of Abode and UKM/UKF registration as a British citizen may prefer the ROA + naturalisation route to British citizenship instead of becoming a British citizen by descent. Especially if already resident in the United Kingdom.
Nevertheless, Right of Abode is held by a substantial number of non-British citizens born before 1983.CR001 wrote: But the OP is not British due to being born pre 1983 outside the UK to parents who were/are not married.
I think I've found afew referees now: a Bank officer (Australian) , Local Government Official (Australian), A Personal Licensee holder (British) , and for good measure going to see my Doctor (Australian) but still unsure of what they have to write. a letter stating there position, how long they have known me and contact details i'm guessing and signature or is there a official form they have to fill in?JAJ wrote:Information on why references are required and qualifications required:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... n-v6_0.pdf
List of acceptable professions:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... ersons.pdf
A person signing as a reference doesn't have to be a personal friend, only someone who has known you in person- can be in a professional capacity- and can attest to your identity if required. (Australian equivalents to specified U.K. professional bodies should normally be acceptable).