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De facto relationships
Non-EEA nationals who are in de facto relationships must have permission to remain in the State. They can apply for a de facto partnership immigration permission.
A non-EEA national whose partner is an Irish national or an Irish resident must provide proof of cohabitation of at least 2 years. If the resident is a non-EEA national, they must have a stamp 1, 4 or 5 residence permission to sponsor an application. Non-EEA nationals with stamp 2 or 3 permission are not eligible to be sponsors.
You can find the application form, the guidelines for applicants, details of the evidence to be submitted and a list of frequently asked questions on the website inis.gov.ie.
If you are a non-EEA national whose partner is an EU national (but not an Irish national) you can apply for a residence card under EU Treaty Rights if you have proof of living together in a durable relationship of at least 2 years.
To clarify, you don't need a PPS number to get married. You need a PPS number to inform the registrar that you have the intention of getting married.Corw wrote: ↑Tue Sep 18, 2018 9:07 pmHi
Thank you so much for your response .Actually i did mistake while writhing down my post i meant to be a company offered me a job not him thats why we relocated to Ireland together.
for full picture of our situation we had an religious marriage Nikah which is not legally binding in Uk (Islamic Marriage) earlier this year at mosque with the gathering of family and friends . We have got our pictures and Islamic marriage certificate.and i believe that we can not fall into Defacto Relationship or Durable Partner category .because they required 2 year relationship evidence which we have got only 16 months.
We have a future plan for civil marriage in Ireland.
Meanwhile we went an local registrar office to find the information regarding how to register for a civil marriage in Ireland.
they asked for a PPS number from my partner to make an application for this purpose .
I said to registrar he doesn't have one. They says to make an application he has to have a PPS number .
and we have no idea how can we register our civil marriage in future without his PPS number ?
This won't be possible as the previous student visa already expired and the non-EU spouse was already an overstayer in the UK. Unlikely any university will issue a CAS as he will be considered high risk of refusal.
Alright I forgot that in the UK they have this CAS thing.. You're right. No point getting another refusal there.
As I and other people have already mentioned, he CANNOT get married in Ireland. The best scenario is that the registrar simply rejects your application, but more than likely they may also report this to the immigration department who will in turn look to deport him. Why do you so eagerly want to get married in Ireland using an illegal approach instead of getting married in the birth country which will make this whole thing much easier?Corw wrote: ↑Thu Sep 20, 2018 7:18 pm@littlerr
Firstly i like to you to clear something please how we can inform to registrar that we would like to have a civil marriage without his PPS as he does not have legal status here ?
do you think will they consider our application without his PPS??
is there anyone on this forum who had a similar situation ever ??
and what he apply for a asylum? obviously he is not in Ireland for an asylum case .
any suggestions please
Thanks