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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
CR001 wrote:1. No they can't. As the daughter is over 18, she needs 5 years residence and 12 months on ilr before she can apply for citizenship in her own right.
2. No, each person over 18 has to qualify for citizenship on their own.
CR001 and secret.simon, thank you both very much. That clarifies the situation. I feared that might be the case. Though by the time the daughter has waited the further 1 year, she will have met the 5 year residence requirement, and she has already passed the English B1 and Life in the UK exams for ILR purposes.secret.simon wrote:....... If the applicant is past their 18th birthday on the date of application, the person must apply for naturalisation on their own strength. There is also no concept of dependency for naturalisation applications, with each application being decided on its own strengths.
Your daughter will have to meet all the requirements of naturalisation as a British citizen (absence, physical presence, good character, English language, LITUK, etc) as your wife, except that she will need to wait for one year after ILR (and meet the five year residence and physical presence requirements) if she is not married to a British citizen.
If the country does not officially allow dual nationality, does it automatically revoke its own nationality from a dual national (such as India and Japan do) or does it merely ignore it (like China does)?
Thank you for your comments secret.simon, I understand it to be as China do.secret.simon wrote: ↑Mon May 04, 2020 11:32 amIf the country does not officially allow dual nationality, does it automatically revoke its own nationality from a dual national (such as India and Japan do) or does it merely ignore it (like China does)?
If the former, it may be a criminal offence in that country to hold a passport of that country in addition to a British passport and on these forums, we would not advise breaking the laws of any country. If the latter, it may not matter.
Some countries, such as India, do provide for lifelong visas (in India's case, called OCI) for former citizens. Perhaps it may be worth looking into whether your wife's country of origin makes provision for such lifelong visas. That may alleviate the requirement to carry two passports, especially if it is illegal.