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If your wife was born in Ireland then your children may be Irish citizens (by descent) already - in that case, you should just get them Irish passports.pigeon308win wrote: I am an Australian citizen and next May my Irish wife (also Australian dual citizen) and our (Australian born) children want to move to Ireland to stay permanently. We were married in Ireland in 1995.
It definitely would not be possible in the United Kingdom. But the Irish are still in the process of constructing an immigration system pretty much from scratch. Not long ago they had so few applicants they just handled each case individually.By reading other postings on this forum, I get the impression that confusion reigns supreme when it comes to the Irish government running a transparent immigration policy and I can't escape the feeling that what the Irish consulate told me is too good to be true.
Can someone here confirm whether it is indeed that simple to just rock up at the airport and register at GNIB and that I don't need D-Spouse visa, EU1 form, etc.
Except that if the Irish parent was not born in the Republic of Ireland or Northern Ireland then citizenship is not automatic and must be applied for by registration. Which is a formality, but takes time (and only becomes effective when granted).scrudu wrote: As your children are born of an Irish citizen, they too are actually also Irish citizens. This means they can simply apply for their Irish Passports. They can have dual nationality, so it's simply a matter of getting the passports organised.
You cannot expect the Irish authorities to know about immigration laws anywhere else.pigeon308win wrote: The issue on being able to work (for short periods of time...as in weeks) in the rest of the EU is a bit vague. GNIB coldn't answer that but they suggested that I make the enquiry with each individual country in which I wish to conduct my work.