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Nothing to worry about here.pauline_al wrote: ↑Mon Oct 01, 2018 2:42 pmI have been legally living and working in Spain since 2009. We have met in 2013 and have been living together ever since. We registered our marriage in 2014.
Where do you get this information from? Although the number of applications has apparently risen since the vote, the process has not been frozen, and improvements have been made, making the whole thing even faster than before the vote on Brexit.Our major doubt is that the Home Office might be freezing all the applications being presented prior to Brexit
Again, nothing to worry about if you have reasonable documentaion.or (even worse!) putting some awkward excuse of not being convinced of the authenticity of our marriage etc. and rejecting my application.
The right way to do this is to apply for a Family Permit in Spain. It's free.We don’t know whether take our chances and apply for an EEA family permit or try to enter the UK via France (Eurostar).
If you mean a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen issued by the Spanish government, I do have it. But as it states here: https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... dence-card, the type of card I've got, doesn't grant me an entrance to the UK:mamalicious187 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 01, 2018 3:54 pmIf you are genuinely married and been so all these years I do not see any reason why you can not apply for a residence card for a family member of an EU Citizen especially since you both have been living together in Spain.
My particular case, I suppose, falls under the following category:An Article 10 residence card is a document which is issued under EU law (‘the Free Movement Directive’) by EEA Member States to non-EEA family members of EEA nationals who are exercising free movement rights in another Member State than that of their nationality.
For example, the non-EEA spouse of a French national who is living and working in Italy may be issued with an Article 10 residence card by the Italian authorities.
So, yes, I guess an application for EEA FP seems to be pretty straightforward, but … I have been a passive participant on this forum for quite some time now and followed a number of the cases where couples have been waiting for 4-6 months only to see their application to be rejected on some ‘silly’ grounds. That’s when entering the UK via France could come into play due to its immediateness, thus my initial post weighing the pros and the cons of two available options.Documents issued on any other basis, for example (biometric) residence permits issued under the national law of another Member State, are not acceptable and do not exempt the holder from the requirement to obtain an EEA family permit.
For example, a non-EEA spouse of a German national living in Germany will usually hold a residence permit issued under German domestic law. Therefore, a United Kingdom EEA family permit is required for travel and entry to the UK.
First of all, thank you very much for your insights, kamoe!!!kamoe wrote: ↑Mon Oct 01, 2018 4:16 pmWhere do you get this information from? Although the number of applications has apparently risen since the vote, the process has not been frozen, and improvements have been made, making the whole thing even faster than before the vote on Brexit.Our major doubt is that the Home Office might be freezing all the applications being presented prior to Brexit
My feelings exactly.
This is why the OP should exhaust all methods and apply as per normal procedure before cutting corners.Technically, you can enter showing marriage certificate and get “EU-family member” treatment on the board even without Family Permit, but in case like yours (several years of marriage living together in EU country) FP hold be quick and easy.
Your case sounds straightforward, so really, my advice is go ahead and apply with the standard FP procedure. If and only if you have a problem, then look for alternatives.pauline_al wrote: ↑Wed Oct 03, 2018 11:06 amI get this (hopefully paranoid:)) idea while reading another forum dedicated to the emigration in general and to the moving to the UK in particular. I realize that everybody's case is different and nuances of each couple do matter. The majority of the posters of the other forum live apart from their EEA spouses, which is clearly not my case.
I just need a different perspective, that's exactly why I decided to post here.
Obormot, kamoe... thanks for your input!