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ponch10 wrote:Hi All,
The rule says that you need 1 year of PR in order to get Naturalisation (via for AN). My PR is dated September 2016. Shall I wait 1 year to just submit AN, or can I send it already and it will then get processed? I figure 6 months will pass by the time my application will get processed, so why not queue up already.
Thoughts?
Date of PR card is nothing to do with it.ponch10 wrote:Hi All,
The rule says that you need 1 year of PR in order to get Naturalisation (via for AN). My PR is dated September 2016. Shall I wait 1 year to just submit AN, or can I send it already and it will then get processed? I figure 6 months will pass by the time my application will get processed, so why not queue up already.
Thoughts?
They are wrong. Advice given on the UKVI 'help line' is frequently flawed, even on the most simple of immigration matters.ponch10 wrote:UKVI told me that the PR status is acquired on the issue date shown on the card...
They are absolutely and fundamentally wrong.ponch10 wrote:UKVI told me that the PR status is acquired on the issue date shown on the card...
They are wrong.ponch10 wrote:UKVI told me that the PR status is acquired on the issue date shown on the card...
UKBA hasn't existed since 2013 and whoever told you that is flat out wrong anyway.Serpiko37 wrote:I was told by UKBA that as an EEA citizen who lived in the UK for over 10 years can apply for naturalisation only if 12 months passed since issue date on my PRDC (??). I have applied and received Document Certifying Permanent Residency in 2013 and came to the UK in 2005 so physically in 2010 I acquired permanent status anyway...it's all confusing and agree with 10 calls and 10 different opinions.....
This one - 12 month since you actually acquired you status and document is just to prove it.Serpiko37 wrote:From GOV:
had permanent residence status for the last 12 months if you’re a citizen of an EEA country - you need to provide a permanent residence document
12 months since when? Receiving it...or 12 month since you actually acquired you status and document is just to prove it.
OK I called again and I have been told that if in my PR application I supplied information for 5 years (not 6), then I have to wait one more year before applying.noajthan wrote:They are absolutely and fundamentally wrong.ponch10 wrote:UKVI told me that the PR status is acquired on the issue date shown on the card...
The card simply confirms status it does not grant or confer any status by itself.
PR status is acquired by exercisng treaty rights for 5 years as qualified person. Do that and you have PR - all the card does is confirm it.
You can have PR status even without such a card.
Casa wrote:This one - 12 month since you actually acquired you status and document is just to prove it.Serpiko37 wrote:From GOV:
had permanent residence status for the last 12 months if you’re a citizen of an EEA country - you need to provide a permanent residence document
12 months since when? Receiving it...or 12 month since you actually acquired you status and document is just to prove it.
You are confusing yourself and not helping yourself by using the helpline.ponch10 wrote:OK I called again and I have been told that if in my PR application I supplied information for 5 years (not 6), then I have to wait one more year before applying.noajthan wrote:They are absolutely and fundamentally wrong.ponch10 wrote:UKVI told me that the PR status is acquired on the issue date shown on the card...
The card simply confirms status it does not grant or confer any status by itself.
PR status is acquired by exercisng treaty rights for 5 years as qualified person. Do that and you have PR - all the card does is confirm it.
You can have PR status even without such a card.
Looking on the web my understanding is that this is an European law matter, and UK PR card should not really come into play. Hence, as long as I exercised free movement rights, by working, for 10 years, I am ok.
The question is: would be ok to provide HMRC a 10 years employment history with the form AN, even though my PR card was issued on the basis of the past 5 years only? Has anyone done that?
Yes, you have almost got it. You can have PR status without a DCPR (card).ponch10 wrote:Casa wrote:This one - 12 month since you actually acquired you status and document is just to prove it.Serpiko37 wrote:From GOV:
had permanent residence status for the last 12 months if you’re a citizen of an EEA country - you need to provide a permanent residence document
12 months since when? Receiving it...or 12 month since you actually acquired you status and document is just to prove it.
according to booklet AN, page 10:
...
"Automatically" have PR status after 5 years of exercising rights. That means that the PR card has nothing to do with it.
Depends what evidence you submitted and for what period.ponch10 wrote:Thank you noajthan.
We do agree on the fact that I do have PR status for long enough. How do I prove that to HO? Or else, how do they know? Or yet, what can I supply to make my application refusal proof?
Remember that in my PR card application I only supplied the requested 5 years, nothing longer.
I arrived in the uk in 2006. Being employed full time, effectively I acquired PR status in 2011 (5 years of work in the UK). I applied for PR card in May 2016 supplying info (bills, payslips and so on) back to March 2011 (past 5 years) and I received a PR card in September 2016. So at this point, HO knows that I have been in the UK for 10 years, but only has info for the past 5.noajthan wrote:Depends what evidence you submitted and for what period.ponch10 wrote:Thank you noajthan.
We do agree on the fact that I do have PR status for long enough. How do I prove that to HO? Or else, how do they know? Or yet, what can I supply to make my application refusal proof?
Remember that in my PR card application I only supplied the requested 5 years, nothing longer.
If you acquired PR in say 2006 or 2013 but only supplied last 5 years evidence then HO are likely to have you down as PR since 2016.
As UK are (mis)using EU DCPR and PRC cards for its own domestic purposes, the card design is unaware and does not support this usage.
The card does not show the date PR was acquired. Only the date of issue.
HO records the date it believes you acquired PR in your file in CID (HO databank).
NCS can check this if/when you apply to naturalise via NCS.
Or you can request a SAR from UKVI which may show this.
I arrived in the uk in 2006. Being employed full time, effectively I acquired PR status in 2011 (5 years of work in the UK). I applied for PR card in May 2016 supplying info (bills, payslips and so on) back to March 2011 (past 5 years) and I received a PR card in September 2016. So at this point, HO knows that I have been in the UK for 10 years, but only has info for the past 5.noajthan wrote:Depends what evidence you submitted and for what period.ponch10 wrote:Thank you noajthan.
We do agree on the fact that I do have PR status for long enough. How do I prove that to HO? Or else, how do they know? Or yet, what can I supply to make my application refusal proof?
Remember that in my PR card application I only supplied the requested 5 years, nothing longer.
If you acquired PR in say 2006 or 2013 but only supplied last 5 years evidence then HO are likely to have you down as PR since 2016.
As UK are (mis)using EU DCPR and PRC cards for its own domestic purposes, the card design is unaware and does not support this usage.
The card does not show the date PR was acquired. Only the date of issue.
HO records the date it believes you acquired PR in your file in CID (HO databank).
NCS can check this if/when you apply to naturalise via NCS.
Or you can request a SAR from UKVI which may show this.
Applying for DCPR is nothing to do with naturalising.ponch10 wrote:However the Booklet AN, page 10, says:
But remember that, unless you are married to or the civil partner of a British citizen, you
should normally have held permanent resident status for 12 months before applying for
naturalisation. This means that you may need to wait until you have been in the United
Kingdom for 6 years before you can apply. When you apply for a permanent residence
document the evidence that you supply for your EEA(PR) application must be for a 5 year
period that ended at least a year before you want to apply for citizenship.
They seem to state it pretty clear that you had to supply 6 years of history with EEA(PR) if you want to apply with AN immediately. This is sufficient grounds for a refusal, unless the application is strong enough on itself?