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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
Yes so basically travelling with Indian passport + BRP is out of question. Assuming I get a British Passport before travel then I will need Indian Visa and for applying for visa a passport surrender certificate is required. I dont think I have enough time for the same.CR001 wrote:A naturalisation certificate is just a piece of paper to an airline. It likely won't be accepted at all.
How long are you going to India for and when do you plan on traveling?
Potential £1000 fine if BRP is not returned.
Thanks CR001. This is what I have decided. Apply for UK passport which will take 2-3 weeks. Apply for Indian passport surrender in parallel which will also r=take 2-3 weeks. Then apply for Indian visa on UK passport...This looks workableCR001 wrote:It is your choice. Depends on how risk adverse you are but still unlikely an airline will allow you to fly with just your naturalisation certificate (which could have been printed at home as it is only a piece of paper).
Current passport waiting times appear to be 2-3 weeks.
I have checked on VFS site and as per that the Surrender process can be initiated even before getting Uk passport. So I will apply for British passport. They will send Indian passport back in few days and then I will apply for Indian Passport Surrender.CR001 wrote:I think you need your British passport to surrender your Indian passport / OCI process. You also have to send your Indian passport with your British Citizenship application.
You have 90 days grace period to travel on your Indian passport from the date you attend your ceremony. So perhaps return BRP, then apply for British passport, travel to India for your holiday and surrender on return etc.
Many thanks CR001. That makes things pretty clear. To keep things simple, In all immigration forms I will mention citizenship as British. your views?CR001 wrote:You would show both passports on departure from India as your British passport is proof of right to enter.
You leave and enter the UK on your British passport.
You enter and leave India on your Indian passport as long as you are within the 90 day grace period.
Thanks alien.uk, Yes that is one of the viable options and I thought about this. Actually as we all know we already have waited so much to get to this stage so do not want to delay rest of the process. Thanks for your suggestion.alien.uk wrote:Cancel your ceremony scheduled next week and book a new ceremony date after your Indian trip , if this is a viable option.
Use your BRP entry into UK after India Vacation - BAU process.
kimgadi wrote:Friends,
This is how I went about to sort out my India travel in a clean, non complicated way. I am sure this will benefit a number of forum members
My naturalisation ceremony was planned for 16-Mar-16 and I had to travel to India on 22-Apr-16. There were multiple options
1. Cancel naturalisation ceremony and follow normal process, travel on Indian passport with BRP card
2. Book a private ceremony for naturalisation, apply for British Passport ASAP, Surrender Indian passport and try to get OCI card before travel
3. Book a private ceremony for naturalisation, apply for British Passport ASAP apply for Indian visa
4. Go for group ceremony for naturalisation and travel to India on Indian passport as Indian government allows to travel on Indian passport for a grace period of 90 days
After considering various suggestions from the form member, this is what I did
1. Attended group ceremony on 16-Mar-16 as I didnt want to pay £120 for private ceremony for I and my wife. having already burnt a lot of money in the ILR/Naturalisation process
2. Applied for British Passport immediately after naturalisation, applied online, it was quick and convenient
3. Got Indian passport and naturalisation certificate back in about one week.
4. Applied for surrender of Indian passport after receiving the passport and naturalisation certifcate back from HM office. It is alright to apply for surrender of Indian passport even before you receive your British passport
5. Kept on checking with HM office about booking passport interview, they will let you book appointment once your passport application has reached certain level of validation and they only know about that
6. Booked appointment well in advance of receiving interview letter, my interview letter was received in about 10 days after date it was issued
7. Got British passport in about a total of 2.5 weeks
8. Applied for online e-visa for India. This was super quick, received visa in less than 24 hours in my email, didnt have to step out from home all online
9. Received my Indian passport surrender certificate back after I had already received Indian visa.
Thanks for advice from foum members, especial thanks to CR001 which helped me to take decisions. The 90 days grace period is bit unclear and when I checked with Indian consulate mentioned that it is only applicable to people who have not yet received their British Passport, if one has a British passport then a visa should be secured for India. Also there was a lot of ambiguity around how to enter UK if I had used Indian passport + BRP route as UK government might not recognise BRP after naturalisation.
I hope above helps. any specific queires, happy to answer
Cheers
you are right cfdman, but actually the cost of visa is just £40 for one month single visa, which is not insignificant but is very less as compared to what we paid to UKBA. In my case it is an official visit so my company should be able to reimburse for the same. Also I was not very keen to postpone the oath ceremony considering we already waiting so long to reach this stage.cfdman wrote:Thats probably the cleanest way to deal, though not the least expensive.
The least-expensive would have been postponing your ceremony until you complete the trip, thus retain the Indian passport + BRP whilst travelling. Would have saved you few £'s in applying for Indian e-Visa.
Neverthless, what you did seems quite clean and safe.
I would be wary of carrying both Indian and British passport, whilst travelling to India even within the 90 days grace period.
Thank you for very useful information. I received naturalization certificate on the 19th July, so I take it for 90 days from the 19th July I can use my Indian passport for going to India and I do not need an Indian visa for this 90 day period. All I need to to is keep my British passport and the Indian passport with me. If Indian authorities at the Indian passport ask why there is no stamp on my Indian passport, then I show them my naturalization certificate and the British passport. Please confirm if it would be a right way to go down to.CR001 wrote:You would show both passports on departure from India as your British passport is proof of right to enter.
You leave and enter the UK on your British passport.
You enter and leave India on your Indian passport as long as you are within the 90 day grace period.