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I'm not sure how the Department of Justice deal in practice with the non-EEA parents of a non-EEA spouse of an Irish citizen, but hey - CitizensInformation says it's ok!CitizensInformation.ie wrote:I am an Australian married to an Irish citizen and living in Cork. Can my Australian father come to live with us? He is on an Australian state pension.
If your father can show that he can support himself in Ireland and if he has private health insurance, he may come and live in Ireland with you.
Hi agniukas,agniukas wrote:benifa, the difference with that is that australians are not visa required nationals. therefore, same as americans, they can reside in ireland if they can prove that they can support themselves. a completely different thing is if the person in mind is a visa required national. unfortunately according to current legislation, or the lack of it, they do not have this possibility.
The same rules don't apply to all nationalities. The parent will need a visa in order to enter as a visitor unless the parent is from a visa free country, and another visa altogether to reside in Ireland as the parent isn't the partner of the EU national.benifa wrote:Hi agniukas,agniukas wrote:benifa, the difference with that is that australians are not visa required nationals. therefore, same as americans, they can reside in ireland if they can prove that they can support themselves. a completely different thing is if the person in mind is a visa required national. unfortunately according to current legislation, or the lack of it, they do not have this possibility.
I must disagree with you there, if I've understood your post correctly.
A visa is merely a form of entry clearance. Some nationals require a visa as a condition of entry, some do not. Once within Ireland, however, the same rules apply to all non-EEA nationals, regardless of whether or not they required a visa in order to enter the country.
If Citizen's Information is correct, the non-EEA parent of a non-EEA spouse of an Irish citizen is permitted to reside in Ireland if he can show that he can support himself in Ireland and if he has private health insurance.
In the example, the non-EEA parent of the non-EEA spouse of an Irish citizen is an Australian citizen, but surely the same rules apply to any nationality?
Or is there some kind of reciprocal agreement between Australia and Ireland for these kind of circumstances? I doubt it, to be honest, but the lack of any source for Citizen's Information's text is not helpful.
meats wrote:The same rules don't apply to all nationalities. The parent will need a visa in order to enter as a visitor unless the parent is from a visa free country, and another visa altogether to reside in Ireland as the parent isn't the partner of the EU national.
benifa wrote:Once within Ireland..
And the parent will need a visa once within Ireland to remain within Ireland too if s/he decides to stay on and not leave.benifa wrote:meats wrote:The same rules don't apply to all nationalities. The parent will need a visa in order to enter as a visitor unless the parent is from a visa free country, and another visa altogether to reside in Ireland as the parent isn't the partner of the EU national.benifa wrote:Once within Ireland..
Wrong.meats wrote:And the parent will need a visa once within Ireland to remain within Ireland too if s/he decides to stay on and not leave.