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You are welcome here.Sakura.m wrote:I am new in the forum.
I don't know if this is the right place to ask for an information.
My question is about self sufficient person. I am NOT applying for a certificate of residence, I just want to know if I am missing somenthing.
I am an eea national and I moved in Uk with my husband (eea national) about 3 years ago. At the time we moved we were engaged and started to live togheter the same day we moved. He found a job immeditely, I didn't.
Following what is written on the government website: "EEA nationals are entitled to reside in the UK for an initial period of three months without needing to exercise a Treaty right. An EEA national who will be in the UK for more than three months will have a right of residence for as long as they remain a qualified person."
My husband was a qualified person because he was working. I was at the beginning a qualified person because I was a jobseeker. The website says: "In most circumstances we would expect an EEA national to be economically active within six months. It is highly likely that an individual claiming a right of residence as a job-seeker will also be exercising treaty rights as a self-sufficient person."
So I think I became a self sufficient person because my husband (at that time fiancee) provided for me. I don't work.
I didn't have (and I still don't have) any comprehensive sickness insurance cover. I have just the ehic my country gave to me but when I moved I lost the right to use it in another country.
My questions are:
1) was the comprehensive sickness insurance a mandatory requirement to stay in Uk ? Can it be a problem whit the authorities ?
2) Now I am a family member of a qualified person, do I still need a comprehensive sickness insurance to live here ? I read about apply for a ehic in uk, is this the same?
3) the comprehensive sickness insurance is just a matter when applyng for certificate of residence ? Can I still live here without it ?
Thank you very much for you time.
Kind regards.
Don't worry you are not the first in this situation - and you won't be the last.Sakura.m wrote:Thank you noajthan for you answer.
What about the period we were not married but just living toghether ?
Did I need a CSI ? I had just the ehic my country gave to me but when I moved I lost the right to use it in another country (This to me is a contraddiction if you need it to apply for PR). Could this be a problem of any kind with the law if I didn't have it ?
I know it sound absourd but I only read about it yesterday because I thouth as eea national I didn't need all this
"stuff". I just want to reside here lawfully.
Thank you again.
You are panicking now - for no good reason.Sakura.m wrote:Just a clarification: I was jobseeker meaning I was looking for work I was not registered for JSA or something.
I was just receiving housing benefits I didn't know I wasn't entitled to receive as self sufficient person. I am so worried I made a terrible mistake.
Besides, there is a website/document where I can find what you said about: you are a direct family member. No CSI necessary ?
Based on OP's initial post:emily666 wrote:Just a question. Since you and your husband are both EEA, why do you need RC? Isn't RC for EEA's spouse who is not from EEA?
Thank you.
My question is about self sufficient person. I am NOT applying for a certificate of residence, I just want to know if I am missing somenthing.
Thank you. I saw this line as well. But i thought EEA members do not need to apply any RC to illustrate that they are qualified person or something. Is it right?noajthan wrote:Based on OP's initial post:emily666 wrote:Just a question. Since you and your husband are both EEA, why do you need RC? Isn't RC for EEA's spouse who is not from EEA?
Thank you.
My question is about self sufficient person. I am NOT applying for a certificate of residence, I just want to know if I am missing somenthing.
EEA nationals do have the option of applying for a confirmatory Residence Certificate.emily666 wrote:Thank you. I saw this line as well. But i thought EEA members do not need to apply any RC to illustrate that they are qualified person or something. Is it right?
Yes RC is optional (but obviously useful) for direct family members.Sakura.m wrote:So, it is not mandatory to apply for a residence certificate just to let the authority know that I am the family member of a qualified person, right ? I have the option to do it if I want.
Is this true even if the marriage was celebrated (and registered) in our eea country of origin (not UK) and the wife keeps her surname ?
Thank you.
It means the RC holder can prove their status, for example to potential employers, landlords & even to UK border officials.Sakura.m wrote:Thank you. What do you mean by useful ?
EEA nationals can have a residence certificate (again optional).Sakura.m wrote:thank you. Can border officials ask for a RC even if I am a eea nationals ?