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No, there is nothing wrong with your post. Welcome to the forum; there should be lots of people here who can help.dima2012 wrote:Hi there,
I am a Romanian citizen and I came to the UK in August 2010 as a housewife. I attend an ESOL course between 2011-2013. I have been working as an employee since February 2015.
My husband has been working as an employee since February 2009, both of us being registered with the Home Office, having the blue card as an employed and a dependent.
My husband is British citizen since 21 April 2015.
Can I apply on August 2015 as spouse of a British citizen?
Thank you
dima,dima2012 wrote:Noajthan ,I don't have CSI because of that I thought I can apply on the basis of being the spouse of British citizen (he has exercised treaty rights).
I read on forum a post of someone with similar situation. The spouse never worked in UK, was housewife all the time and she apply and obtain the citizen after 5 years. But they are non_EEA. Do you know if the law is different for non EEA?
Thank you very much both of you.
Not completely correct.sylvia532 wrote:My understanding is that as soon as one spouse becomes a British citizen the other spouse can apply on this basis. This means that only 3 years of residency are taken into consideration by the HO and the applicant doesn't have to wait 12 months after obtaining PR. Of course a marriage certificate needs to be provided as well aa the British spouse's naturalisation certificate number.
But the Gov UK booklet for naturalisation is quite clear:sylvia532 wrote:My understanding is that as soon as one spouse becomes a British citizen the other spouse can apply on this basis. This means that only 3 years of residency are taken into consideration by the HO and the applicant doesn't have to wait 12 months after obtaining PR.
...
what is the blue card?having the blue card as an employed and a dependent.
secret.simon wrote:Not completely correct.sylvia532 wrote:My understanding is that as soon as one spouse becomes a British citizen the other spouse can apply on this basis. This means that only 3 years of residency are taken into consideration by the HO and the applicant doesn't have to wait 12 months after obtaining PR. Of course a marriage certificate needs to be provided as well aa the British spouse's naturalisation certificate number.
Settlement (ILR/PR) is a requirement for naturalisation, including for spouses of British citizens.
ILR/PR currently require a minimum of 5 years residence in the UK and if the other spouse has not earned ILR/PR, they can not apply for citizenship on the basis of their spouse's citizenship
The only difference of having a British spouse is that if your spouse is British, you can apply for naturalisation without waiting one year, whereas for people without a British spouse, they have to wait a year between IL/PR and British citizenship.
noajthan wrote:dima,
what is the blue card?having the blue card as an employed and a dependent.
is it in your name?
is it a PR card?
Yes but for an EEA person to achieve PR they (sadly) require 5 years of treaty rights living in UK.sylvia532 wrote:https://www.gov.uk/becoming-a-british-c ... sh-citizen
I think this confirms what I said. It says that 3 years of residency is required from a person holding ILR or PR and married to a BC.
2.4 & 2.5 yes as you are an EEA person.dima2012 wrote:If I will apply as spouse of British citizen have I fill 2.4. - 2.6. ?
ok, so it is not a PR card.dima2012 wrote:noajthan wrote:dima,
what is the blue card?having the blue card as an employed and a dependent.
is it in your name?
is it a PR card?
Noajthan,
The Blue Card is a work permit.
I read it again and agree with you. This means that 5 years residency is necessary because that's how long it takes to acquire PR but those who hold PR and are married to BC are required to provide evidence of only 3 years residency. This is an important difference in some cases because EU nationals have to provide evidence proving that they were physically resident in the UK for 5 years before making the application. When I was applying for naturalisation it was an issue because HO only accepts payslips or letters from government institutions (no statements or bills!)and I didn't have any such evidence to cover the period when I wasn't working (I was pregnant and supported by my husband). So by applying as spouses of BCs EU nationals only are required to provide proof of residency for the last 3 years, not 5. I should add that I wasn't working after obtaining PR. Even tho I wasn't required to exercise treaty rights at that point, I was still expected to prove that I was physically in the UK. I had to obtain letters from hospital and my GP but was told that HO doesn't usually accept GP letters. Madnessnoajthan wrote:Yes but for an EEA person to achieve PR they (sadly) require 5 years of treaty rights living in UK.sylvia532 wrote:https://www.gov.uk/becoming-a-british-c ... sh-citizen
I think this confirms what I said. It says that 3 years of residency is required from a person holding ILR or PR and married to a BC.
The PDF booklet explains it in detail.
(For a non-EEA person with ILR yes, agreed, it's 3 years - same as for my wife).
noajthan wrote:2.4 & 2.5 yes as you are an EEA person.dima2012 wrote:If I will apply as spouse of British citizen have I fill 2.4. - 2.6. ?
2.6 is only for EEA A8 countries and the PDF booklet (section 6 - iii) shows Romania is not included in the list of A8 countries.
dima,dima2012 wrote:Even I started working in my own I am still the spouse of an EEA worker, right? I don't understand why should be a problem ....
I read that to mean: after the date your husband was naturalised (this year) the HO consider him to be 'only British' when they are applying the regulations.EEA nationals who are also British citizens are not considered to be ‘EEA nationals’ for the purposes of the Immigration (European Economic Area) Regulations 2006 (‘the Regulations’) .
This applies whether or not the British citizen has always resided in the UK.
A family member of a dual EEA national and British citizen does not have a right of residence under the regulations on the basis of their relationship to the dual national.
Not sure, in your case you may be both. But I do not know if that is permitted.dima2012 wrote:...
Still confused....
As spouse of BC:
1. At 2.4. what have to tick......"Are you an EEA national" or "Or a family member of an EEA national" ?
2. Next tabel: should be fill with my Treaty Rights?