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This is interesting. I was going to say almost the opposite. Or maybe I would say it is important and it isn't.John wrote:So getting back to your question, the truth must be that EU countries do not have records of arrival or departure, on movement between EU countries, but that is not to say the matter is not important. For example say someone moves to another EU country, and starts exercising Treaty Rights as a self-sufficient person, within 3 months they will need to acquire sickness insurance in order exercise Treaty Rights in that way. But if it is clear they have been in the country for more than 3 months, and do not have the needed insurance, there could well be problems.
It can't "put off PR" as PR is not "granted" by a member state, it is rather automatically "acquired" by a person after exercising treaty rights for 5 years.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:It is important, because after you have been resident for 5 years, you will have PR. And so measuring when those 5 years began can depend on the initial 90 days and what happened just after that. So it can put off PR.
I agree. PR just happens, as is clear from the first highlighted section.Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:It is important, because after you have been resident for 5 years, you will have PR. And so measuring when those 5 years began can depend on the initial 90 days and what happened just after that. So it can put off PR.