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Fraid not, EEA Family Permit is not available you you unless you are moving to another EU other than your own, which you have said you aren't. In any case EEA Family Permit is the UK term, other states have their own terminology.Blyboy wrote:To all,
I feel I have missed something glaringly obvious, but clearly I am not able to work out what it is, hence the reason for the following question.
I am a British Citizen living and working in Saudi Arabia. My wife is Thai and we have been married for 4 years. We wish to come to the UK next May (at the same time on the same flight), and I believe I can apply for an EEA family permit. This will be done online whilst I am here in Saudi.
After reading through the GOV.UK website on the EEA family permit I feel confident that this is the correct 'visa', but I convinced myself it wasn't over the last few months due to reading about the '18,000' and that I had to have a job in the UK lined up before I arrived. I believed that I would need to follow the Surinder Singh route and was genuinely worried that is was more trouble that it was worth.
However, after revisiting the GOV.UK website today, I realised that perhaps I had overreacted. I am not a stupid individual, but this whole process has got me second guessing myself, so I am asking for help.
Question
1- Is it as simple as just applying for an EEA family permit and getting that before we travel back to the UK?
Thanks in advance
No. It is not that easy.Blyboy wrote:To all,
I feel I have missed something glaringly obvious, but clearly I am not able to work out what it is, hence the reason for the following question.
I am a British Citizen living and working in Saudi Arabia. My wife is Thai and we have been married for 4 years. We wish to come to the UK next May (at the same time on the same flight), and I believe I can apply for an EEA family permit. This will be done online whilst I am here in Saudi.
...
Question
1- Is it as simple as just applying for an EEA family permit and getting that before we travel back to the UK?
Thanks in advance
Sadly British citizens (myself included) appear to get the fuzzy end of the lollipop in terms of UK immigration/migration (when compared to our EEA brethren).Blyboy wrote:Yes, I read about all this a few months ago and found myself amazed at how much effort if was going to be, but after revisiting it today and reading the EEA family permit information on the GOV.UK website I thought I had overreacted......how disappointed I am
Anyway, thanks for all for 'unfortunately' clearing up the confusion
1. YesBlyboy wrote:Whilst I have you all here:
Two more additional questions, If I may.
1- The directive 2004/38/EC is what all this is about, correct? I want to make sure I am as 'primed' as possible before I make the journey next year.
2- Would it be possible to, after living in Ireland for about 3 months, to apply for my wife's EEA permit at the British Embassy?
I know there was one poster on here who relayed details of a successful entry through Ireland, but was wondering if you could get an EEA family permit first, as opposed to just turning up at the UK border.
I know this may sound basic and like I haven't read anything, but I really am confused after all this
Thanks for your help
Wanderer wrote:1. YesBlyboy wrote:Whilst I have you all here:
Two more additional questions, If I may.
1- The directive 2004/38/EC is what all this is about, correct? I want to make sure I am as 'primed' as possible before I make the journey next year.
2- Would it be possible to, after living in Ireland for about 3 months, to apply for my wife's EEA permit at the British Embassy?
I know there was one poster on here who relayed details of a successful entry through Ireland, but was wondering if you could get an EEA family permit first, as opposed to just turning up at the UK border.
I know this may sound basic and like I haven't read anything, but I really am confused after all this
Thanks for your help
2. Well, UK is tightening up on this, citing it as 'circumventing the immigration rules' which it is being honest. However it is legal but.... Also 3 months is too short under current conditions, some will say 6, 9 I'd go for 12 because I am risk averse. 6 is probably the minimum since this is the minimum property lease term you need to show you've 'shifted your centre of life'.
Personally I feel this door will be largely shut in a 6-9 months but YMMV....
Since UKVI increased their powers and common sense investigating everything immigration-wise has become a game of cat and mouse.Casa wrote:Wanderer has made a valid point about the rental term. A forum member was recently refused under SS due to landlord checks in Ireland showing that the couple had asked for a short lease of under 6 months. This showed that they had no intention to 'move the centre of their life' to an EU state, but pre-planned a return to the UK under Surinder Singh, thereby 'circumventing the Immigration rules'.