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Absolutely.yamaha wrote:Hi I am a UK citizen ( Northern Ireland) married to a Brazilian and currently living in Brazil.We are thinking of moving to Ireland,can we just show up at Dublin airport with our passports and marriage cert. and be allowed entry into Ireland?
No it would not. Incidentally, how long had you been together, at the time when she was refused admission to Ireland?yamaha wrote:One other thing,about one and a half years ago before we were married we were living together in Belfast and my future wife had overstayes her UK visa but we left from Dublin to go to Brazil on holiday and stupidly returned again.When my future wife tried to gain entry she was refused and sent back to Brazil the next day.Would this heve any effect on us gaining entry now that we are married?
Yes it would. It would mean that your wife can reside in the UK using the EEA regs and not the UK regs, if she so wishes.yamaha wrote:I am eligible for an Irish passport bbut just havent got round to applying for it,would this make any difference if we decided to live in NI?
So could we arrive in Dublin Airport with me having an Irish passport and our marriage certificate and be allowed to travel to and live in NI without any problems?benifa wrote:Yes it would. It would mean that your wife can reside in the UK using the EEA regs and not the UK regs, if she so wishes.yamaha wrote:I am eligible for an Irish passport bbut just havent got round to applying for it,would this make any difference if we decided to live in NI?
That is correct. No process to be completed before hand.yamaha wrote:So could we arrive in Dublin Airport with me having an Irish passport and our marriage certificate and be allowed to travel to and live in NI without any problems?benifa wrote:Yes it would. It would mean that your wife can reside in the UK using the EEA regs and not the UK regs, if she so wishes.yamaha wrote:I am eligible for an Irish passport bbut just havent got round to applying for it,would this make any difference if we decided to live in NI?
Or is there a process that we have to complete beforehand?
No problem.yamaha wrote:Thanks for the info benifa and sorry for all the questions,
No. You have the right to enter and reside for up to three months without any condition or formality other than the requirement to hold a valid passport or National ID card.yamaha wrote:but on entering dublin Airport do we have to provide an address where we will be staying in Ireland
Not at all. The ECJ ruling in the case of Metock made clear:yamaha wrote:or if we wanted to go straight to NI from Dublin Airport would we not then be illegally entering the UK (NI)
ECJ ruling on in the case of Metock wrote:the Court holds that a non-Community spouse of a Union citizen who accompanies or joins that citizen can benefit from the directive, irrespective of when and where their marriage took place and of how that spouse entered the host Member State.