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Wanderer wrote:What's her visa status?
I concur with all this.....crisbella218 wrote:Hi,
Before I became an Irish citizen my husband would apply for an Irish visa under the Directive 2004/38/EC (Free Movement Directive). Basically if your wife's card does not say family member of a union citizen you will need to apply for a visa for her to go via dublin. You should be travelling with her.
Link for the details is: http://www.inis.gov.ie/en/INIS/Pages/Fa ... 20citizens
As you are the spouse this would be fee exempt under the rules so all you need to pay is the postage to London Embassy and a return special delivery envelope back to Belfast for your documents. If you email the embassy with questions they are very good at replying. In terms of timescales I got mine usually within 4 week so you would need to move fast.
This website is the starting point for the online application: https://www.dfa.ie/irish-embassy/great- ... r-ireland/
Good luck.
On the basis of previous statements, I believe Mrs dmax actually has permanent residence and holds a permanent residence certificate (PRC). As added complication is that dmax is a British-Irish dual national.dmax wrote:her status is - she is in belfast uk on ILR . i am her eea spouse and will travel with her.Wanderer wrote:What's her visa status?
THANKYOU
The Gardi already informed my husband previously that unless the card says "family member of union citizen" you will require a visa. You could arrive at the border with your marriage certificate and argue with them to give you a visa. But as the visa is free better to just apply.Richard W wrote:On the basis of previous statements, I believe Mrs dmax actually has permanent residence and holds a permanent residence certificate (PRC). As added complication is that dmax is a British-Irish dual national.dmax wrote:her status is - she is in belfast uk on ILR . i am her eea spouse and will travel with her.Wanderer wrote:What's her visa status?
THANKYOU
@Casa: A transit visa is the wrong document, for (a) Mrs dmax is Thai, and (b) she will be travelling by land between Belfast and Dublin.
Except for their own nationals, Schengen (by Schengen regulation) and apparently the the UK (but not admitted in the EEA Regulations) accept PRCs. Directive 2004/38/EC does not require a PRC to be accepted in lieu of a visa. A petition to change the directive was rejected on the ground that it was unnecessary for Schengen, as the Schengen states already accept them. I can't find the current Irish EEA regulation stating that an RC plus spouse is adequate; possibly Ireland does not obey that law.
thankyou but apply to where and for what type visa ?crisbella218 wrote:The Gardi already informed my husband previously that unless the card says "family member of union citizen" you will require a visa. You could arrive at the border with your marriage certificate and argue with them to give you a visa. But as the visa is free better to just apply.Richard W wrote:On the basis of previous statements, I believe Mrs dmax actually has permanent residence and holds a permanent residence certificate (PRC). As added complication is that dmax is a British-Irish dual national.dmax wrote:her status is - she is in belfast uk on ILR . i am her eea spouse and will travel with her.Wanderer wrote:What's her visa status?
THANKYOU
@Casa: A transit visa is the wrong document, for (a) Mrs dmax is Thai, and (b) she will be travelling by land between Belfast and Dublin.
Except for their own nationals, Schengen (by Schengen regulation) and apparently the the UK (but not admitted in the EEA Regulations) accept PRCs. Directive 2004/38/EC does not require a PRC to be accepted in lieu of a visa. A petition to change the directive was rejected on the ground that it was unnecessary for Schengen, as the Schengen states already accept them. I can't find the current Irish EEA regulation stating that an RC plus spouse is adequate; possibly Ireland does not obey that law.
Failing that flying Belfast to London then onto Thailand would be the next option.
hiRichard W wrote:On the basis of previous statements, I believe Mrs dmax actually has permanent residence and holds a permanent residence certificate (PRC). As added complication is that dmax is a British-Irish dual national.dmax wrote:her status is - she is in belfast uk on ILR . i am her eea spouse and will travel with her.Wanderer wrote:What's her visa status?
THANKYOU
@Casa: A transit visa is the wrong document, for (a) Mrs dmax is Thai, and (b) she will be travelling by land between Belfast and Dublin.
Except for their own nationals, Schengen (by Schengen regulation) and apparently the the UK (but not admitted in the EEA Regulations) accept PRCs. Directive 2004/38/EC does not require a PRC to be accepted in lieu of a visa. A petition to change the directive was rejected on the ground that it was unnecessary for Schengen, as the Schengen states already accept them. I can't find the current Irish EEA regulation stating that an RC plus spouse is adequate; possibly Ireland does not obey that law.
Could you attach a pic of both sides of the card she has, with personal details pixeled out? That was we'll know for sure what leave she has.dmax wrote:does wife need apply to irish embassy in london ?
irish consulate in dublin ?
and again please, what type of visa does she need for this short 3 week holiday ?
these visa reg are so difficult to understand , even some of the people in the know do not know.
anyway thanks again and hopefully someone can blunty straightforward give me a one sentence answer to my question
That why I put this link in my original post: https://www.dfa.ie/irish-embassy/great- ... r-ireland/dmax wrote:does wife need apply to irish embassy in london ?
irish consulate in dublin ?
and again please, what type of visa does she need for this short 3 week holiday ?
these visa reg are so difficult to understand , even some of the people in the know do not know.
anyway thanks again and hopefully someone can blunty straightforward give me a one sentence answer to my question
And of course there will be several questions to ask:crisbella218 wrote:That why I put this link in my original post: https://www.dfa.ie/irish-embassy/great- ... r-ireland/
So its for the Irish embassy in London. You apply for spouse of Eu citizen visa unless she is travelling by herself then you apply for visit visa. Spouse visa need marriage certificate, passports, household bill and confirmation of flights. Also an explanation note to say you are in NI so you will need the multiple visa to travel via the airport as since we are not in GB they take NI applications a bit easier cause of being close to the border. Normally they would look for hotels etc but living in NI you don't always stay and travel back across the border again.
Again the London Embassy email address is good and they reply back very quick if you have any questions.
This is not a Surinder Singh case, as all the OP wants is a visa for his wife to travel to Dublin airport to fly out.Richard W wrote:And of course there will be several questions to ask:crisbella218 wrote:That why I put this link in my original post: https://www.dfa.ie/irish-embassy/great- ... r-ireland/
So its for the Irish embassy in London. You apply for spouse of Eu citizen visa unless she is travelling by herself then you apply for visit visa. Spouse visa need marriage certificate, passports, household bill and confirmation of flights. Also an explanation note to say you are in NI so you will need the multiple visa to travel via the airport as since we are not in GB they take NI applications a bit easier cause of being close to the border. Normally they would look for hotels etc but living in NI you don't always stay and travel back across the border again.
Again the London Embassy email address is good and they reply back very quick if you have any questions.
1) As a Surinder Singh case, how much does she pay?
2) Can she get multiple entry? Or will she also have to apply to Bangkok for the return journey?
vinny wrote:Check if you need an Irish visa.
I said in my previous few posts you need a visa as the SPOUSE OF AN EU CITIZEN. I told you to email the IRISH EMBASSY in LONDON not INIS....dmax wrote:wife is thai .
wife has ILR in UK for 10 years .
wife lives in belfast UK.
i am her husband , i am an eea national with both uk and irish passport.
i want to travel with my wife from belfast to dublin airport to get flight .
3 week holiday to thailand returning the same route.
is there a free visa she can get from INIS ?
if not free then what visa does she need to apply for ?
reason for posting is i still have not got a simple and accurate answer to this question from anyone on here previously. plus INIS have failed to reply to my emails that i sent weeks ago, they are backlogged it seems.
simple answer please. thankyou