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Your plan sounds fine so far.aureliebg wrote:Hi all,
Our question: what do we say at the immigration at the airport? What stamp do we need? Any special visa or stamp needed before applying? Knowing that Israeli citizens can automatically get a 3 months tourist visa.
Well thank you for this answer but this is not an option for us. Maybe a backup plan but that's all.Living outside of France, we just need to wait another 3 months until my husband can obtain citizenship (4 years in case of marriage) but he would have to know French.joesoap101 wrote:It would be much easier if you lived in France for 2 years so that your husband can apply for French citizenship by declaration, because if you live outside of France, he has to wait 5 years. Likewise, obtaining Irish citizenship would take approximately 7.5-8 years. Citizenship may not be your goal, however the security it provides is well worth the 3 years in France, and then you can move to Ireland with no hassles at all.
Hi Archigabe,archigabe wrote:I am a bit concerned that they might reject the application straightaway as incomplete if you send it in without proof of your employment. The proof of employment is one of the required documents on the E.U1 application form.They don't ask for residency card of other E.U country on the form, so it's excusable to some extent to send it in later.
Great, I will definately keep you posted on every step.archigabe wrote:Oh yeah, you're right.They only require proof of employment when you apply for a 'spouse visa' at the irish embassy. Since your husband doesn't need a visa to enter ireland, you can just fly into the airport with passports,marriage cert and other required docs without having to apply for a visa from the Irish embassy.
Do keep us posted on how things turn out!
As long as the EU citizen is working, studying or self-sufficient, you should have no problems.archigabe wrote:I am a bit concerned that they might reject the application straightaway as incomplete if you send it in without proof of your employment. The proof of employment is one of the required documents on the E.U1 application form.They don't ask for residency card of other E.U country on the form, so it's excusable to some extent to send it in later.
If you are not working, not a student and not retired, they could require you to have the equivalent of the smallest amount the government pays people on welfare.Zucker wrote:What is the amount needed to be self-sufficient? I read some people say they went with marriage cert, passports and money. How much money do you need to show in your EU1 application form?
I think health insurance is a requirement for EU1. The cheapest that I could find for a family of 3 is about 600 euro per year.
:roll:
As far as I can remember, there's no requirement to show savings on the E.U1 form. If you were apply for the Spouse visa, then you would have to show bank statements.Zucker wrote:What is the amount needed to be self-sufficient? I read some people say they went with marriage cert, passports and money. How much money do you need to show in your EU1 application form?
I think health insurance is a requirement for EU1. The cheapest that I could find for a family of 3 is about 600 euro per year.
If you do not want to work, then I think having the minimal resources to support all of the people from savings is not unreasonable. If you want to or are working, then you are not required to have any particular amount of money.microlab wrote:Yes Directive,but in this instance its Family of 3 and that would amass to 15-20K a year!But as you said there is no set rule how much one should have in the bank so this figure I mentioned is fictional.In any case, it is usually pretty low
I think decisions are made on case to case basis.