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For naturalisation, the relevant residence period is the 5 years before the application. However, to be eligible to apply one must hold ILR/PR for at least one year before applying. With EEA nationals, it's a bit more complex as Permanent Residece is obtained automatically after exercising treaty rights for 5 years. Once PR is obtained, it is not lost until you are absent from the UK for more than 2 years. As you don't have a formal proof you have obtained PR, you need first to prove that. Using self employment is in some cases more complex to prove than employment. That is why I suggested that if your partner has been employed for 5 years in the past, she can use those years to prove she has obtained PR sometime in the past as that would satisfy the requirement for PR. she will in any case need to prove residence in the UK for 5 years before the application.luckyluca wrote:from my understanding only the last 5 years are relevant in the application. We have documents covering the period 2007 - 2001 but from what I know they're completely irrelevant.
As I said, it is not straight forward case with self employment. Your partner might want first to apply for confirmation of her PR status using form EEA3. The application is free and will flush out any issues with her treaty rights.back to subject what are your suggestions regarding the available documents ( they're listed in my previous post) ?
Abstracting from your specific cases, I suppose that may be because if a case is straightforward, say an EEA citizen has got the last consecutive 6 years of P60 and whatelse, one may think that EEA citizen could well ask naturalisation directly, while if the case is less clear cut, as the EEA3 application costs nothing, one may thing that getting the PR would mitigate the risk of see its AN application rejected, loosing the related fee.luckyluca wrote:I can see why you suggested the AAE3 form now, but I still don't understand why I wouldn't need it and why my partner would.
luckyluca wrote:Hi,
I have my formAN ready except for the self assessment statement of account.
I'm a PAYE employee and have a small earnings business.
I fill my tax returns online and pay for any tax due online, there and then.
The thing is I haven't received self assessment statement of accounts since 2010 and I can't find any statement I can print on my self assessment online portal.
the only thing available online it seems to be a summary of balance (see pics below). I suspect printing this wouldn't suffice.
Would it be feasible to request HMRC to post my latest self assessment statement of account (ideally to receive it within 5 working days)?
Kind Regards
Luca