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and b) to apply for naturalization, a person must not leave the country for more than 6 weeks:For your benefit, I'm quoting INIS's official correspondence so that you can refrain from misleading others in future.
From: BQ Reg Office <burghquayregoffice@justice.ie>
Sent: 06 May 2020 14:59
Subject: Re: Minimum residence requirement for Stamp 4 holders
Dear xxx,
I wish to acknowledge receipt of your email re: Minimum residence requirement for Stamp 4 holders
Generally, a residency permit holder is permitted to remain outside the State no more than 90 days consecutively without negative impact on their residency status.
Specific exceptions would take precedence over this, the IIP is an example of such. Permission under EU Treaty Rights in another exception where a person may remain outside the State for up to 180 days.
They should also notify ISD when they're out of the country for 6 weeks or more when they apply for citizenship - https://www.irishimmigration.ie/how-to- ... alisation/In both cases, the final 12 months must be continuous residence in the State with up to 6 weeks allowed to facilitate foreign travel for business family or holiday purposes.
If he got EUSS family permit, I assume he just applied for pre-settled, not settled status. That, as stated on UK gov website, only allows him to leave the country for 6 months in a year if he wants to switch to settled status - https://www.gov.uk/settled-status-eu-ci ... atus-meansIf you are outside the State for longer than 6 weeks after you submit your application, you must notify ISD by letter or email to explain why.
If they're away for 2 years, they'll lose it completely.You may be eligible for settled status before you have 5 years’ continuous residence.
[...]
Five years’ continuous residence means that for 5 years in a row you’ve been in the UK, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man for at least 6 months in any 12-month period.
Also, when applying for naturalization, in both countries (UK and Ireland) you have to show your intention to reside in the country you're applying in (UK for UK, Ireland for Irish) and not adhering to it might lead to consequences (see post2099849.html#p2099849 as an example).If you have pre-settled status, you can spend up to 2 years in a row outside the UK, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man without losing your status. You will need to maintain your continuous residence if you want to qualify for settled status.
[...]
If you spend too much time outside the UK, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man
You’ll lose your settled or pre-settled status.
You are by law required to inform INIS of any permanent change of address. In addition, as part of your Stamp 4 conditions, you agreed that you will be a resident of the Republic of Ireland and you will not leave the country for more than 90 days in a year.
Failure of either may result in your residence permit being revoked and might cause long-term damage to your immigration history, especially that you are considering to move back to Ireland in a year or two.
Of course, many people do the same - they just try to conceal this when they pass the border. Sometimes the border officer finds out the truth, sometimes they don't.
Your biggest mistake here (in addition to failing to inform INIS of the address change) is that you showed both your BRP and IRP to the border officer. That is like automatically acknowledging that you have violated at least one country's residence requirement. If you show them only 1 card, either IRP or BRP card, it's likely that they would just rush you in without asking any questions.
Since you are a UK resident now and hold a BRP, you are no longer an Irish resident, and cannot use your IRP card to gain entry.
If the goal is citizenship, better option would indeed be to live in Ireland for ~4 years or more (5 years to be eligible for citizenship + about 2 years for the naturalization process itself), as in the UK the naturalization process will take about 7 years (5 years on pre settled + a year on settled + 6 months for a decision). Either passport would allow him to live in these two countries.