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I am Britishsecret.simon wrote:Just to clarify, what is your nationality and status in the UK?
Thanks for the link. That is the thing I have never fully understood, is that he was financially dependant on his dad, which was the reason he was granted it based on dependency. But obviously getting the EEA2 means he is no longer financially supported because it allows him to work. So I think that is the reason it simply said on the letter accompanying his EEA that his residency is based on his dad living in the UK and he must inform the home office if his dad leaves the UK. That is all it said.noajthan wrote:You may claim benefits in your own right but your bf residency is based on his sponsor & his continuing, proven dependency on his sponsor.
To get up to speed on public funds see:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... _clean.pdf
The RC is not a visa, it just confirms status at the date of issue.Janey142 wrote:Thanks for the link. That is the thing I have never fully understood, is that he was financially dependant on his dad, which was the reason he was granted it based on dependency. But obviously getting the EEA2 means he is no longer financially supported because it allows him to work. So I think that is the reason it simply said on the letter accompanying his EEA that his residency is based on his dad living in the UK and he must inform the home office if his dad leaves the UK. That is all it said.noajthan wrote:You may claim benefits in your own right but your bf residency is based on his sponsor & his continuing, proven dependency on his sponsor.
To get up to speed on public funds see:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... _clean.pdf
noajthan wrote:The RC is not a visa, it just confirms status at the date of issue.Janey142 wrote:Thanks for the link. That is the thing I have never fully understood, is that he was financially dependant on his dad, which was the reason he was granted it based on dependency. But obviously getting the EEA2 means he is no longer financially supported because it allows him to work. So I think that is the reason it simply said on the letter accompanying his EEA that his residency is based on his dad living in the UK and he must inform the home office if his dad leaves the UK. That is all it said.noajthan wrote:You may claim benefits in your own right but your bf residency is based on his sponsor & his continuing, proven dependency on his sponsor.
To get up to speed on public funds see:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... _clean.pdf
He is allowed to work as per case law that prevents discrimination or lesser rights than UK nationals.
Dependency does not mean he has to remain destitute. I think benefits would be a no-no though.
Thanks for the information. It seems those granted eea2 under direct family, the residency rights do not change even if the relationship changes. This has put my mind at ease.noajthan wrote:You can get up to speed on direct family members of EEA nationals here:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... s_v3_0.pdf
- pages 17-18 cover dependency