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Did you read Q5 in this link?meringue wrote:The more I read, the greater my confusion. Maybe someone here can point me in the right direction? I am an EEA national, have been married to a British citizen for 25 years. After living in the UK for the last 20 years , I feel now that the time is right for me to become a British citizen. I have been a stay-at-home Mum, bringing up our three (British) children. The youngest is disabled and I have been his carer for the last 8 years ( receiving carers allowance). I am now getting the impression that there is no route suitable for my application : I have not been working or been available for work, no private health insurance, my husband is British and not an EEA national, I don't need a spouse visa either. Or maybe I misunderstand ........?
Personally the simplest route I can see for you, is spouse of a British Citizen. For that, since you have not been working but was here lawfully, you need to gain PR/ILR on long residence basis (10 years) and you can do it at any Premium Service Centre and once granted ILR, you can apply for spouse route Naturalisation given thatmeringue wrote:Thank you, Secret.Simon. Yes, it is very last century .... but so am I No wonder that I can't find any other cases like mine.
I am still not quite sure as to which route to take: applying as a spouse or as an EEA national. Studying the forms involved, nothing seems to apply to me.
Not sure whether ILR just happens automatically or is some paper that needs to be applied for?
Your interesting link again refers to persons exercising EEA free movement rights: This seems to be connected to working ( or various other activities) and not just to being here, bringing up the children.?? I am not convinced that I am even classed as exercising these rights.
Oh, but since she has not been working at all that is why I suggested going through ILR.vinny wrote:No point applying for ILR under Long Residence, as that implicitly requires proof that you have been exercising treaty rights for at least 10 continuous years and KOLL. If you could do that, then it's much simpler and cheaper to apply for confirmation of PR, which requires only 5 continuous years' proof of exercising treaty rights.
As she wrote in her opening post:blooms wrote:You can apply for EEA PR without working. It is called "self-sufficient" and you only need to show that you do not need to work because you rely on other financial resources - in this case, the spouse.
Unfortunately, this route also requires you to show that you have had private health insurance for the 5 years you are claiming self-sufficiency.
You might want to check you are not covered by a health plan that your spouse's employer provides. That would satisfy the requirement and you can then get EEA PR immediately. After that, you wait one year and apply for citizenship.
I am guessing that unless covered by her husband's insurance, she has to get insured and wait five years perhaps?I have not been working or been available for work, no private health insurance, my husband is British and not an EEA national, I don't need a spouse visa either.
Yes in that case, personally I think it should count, so I'd simply book NCS and write a cover letter detailing your immigration history, telling the date you consider yourself to have achieved PR status NCS can then look into your case and advise if its all fine. Then you can take LIUK test and English test etc and submit application. Good luck.meringue wrote:Thanks, fwd079. I am pleased about any thoughts anyone might have.
Re my mini self-employment over the years: I wonder whether there is a minimum amount one has to earn or whether the business even has to make a profit.
I am also wondering whether legislation that was in place at the time of my moving here permanently would still count even if the law is different now. But as per link from my earlier post, it seems that I had ILR automatically when I moved here before 2000; that was stopped in 2000 and removed retrospectively?
Personally I think this post by vinny is your best bet. Good luck.meringue wrote:No more opinions, anyone?
Under the system now, a self suffienct person can't claim benefits like carers allowance etc and they must also have a CSI or their own countries EHIC to pay the NHS, to have a right to reside.meringue wrote:Thanks!
I just phoned the Nationality Helpdesk and was informed that 20 years in the country and 25 years of marriage to a British citizen don't count. Looks like I have to start now with my 5 years of work/self employment. -- not easy with a disabled child ( grown up) to look after.
Since I have been getting carers allowance for looking after him, I stopped paying NI contributions from my very small self employment as I was told, I'd only be paying double ( the carers allowance pays towards NI for me). Apparently that doesn't count towards my position with this naturalisation. Or even permanent residency.