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As the married spouse of an EU citizen, you have an almost absolute right to be with your wife when they move to another EU member state (and after they have worked in another member state, then also when the spouse moves back to their home member state).treena.oakley wrote:I know I posted this in another spot, but I'm seeking an answer and I'm not sure if people can see it where I posted it. I'm also sorry if this has been covered somewhere else; however, I didn't see anything.
I am a Canadian citizen married to a Norwegian citizen who is moving to Sweden in less than a month. I am in the process of trying to join her in Sweden, however, I have a question regarding travelling and visa requirements.
I know I'm allowed to join her under the Directive rules. However, I'm unsure about actually entering Sweden.
As a Canadian I do not need a visa to travel to the Schengen area/Sweden; however, I have just left Norway after spending 90 days in the country. The Schengen rules say 90 days every 180 days, but if I am travelling to Sweden to join my wife do I still have to wait 90 days before I can enter as a non-visa traveler? Can I enter visa-free at any point under the rules of the Directive, or should I contact the embassy in Canada to arrange a visa?
Norway is not an EU member; it is an EEA member. But it is required to implement all the free movement law, including ECJ case law. So from the free movement perspective it makes no difference.jorgen41 wrote:As i understand it you are married to a Norwegian citizen hence she is not a EU member(Norway isnt a EU member as far as i know) and there for NO EU Directives apply.
Have missed that one, were can i read about that they have to follow the eu directive ?Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Norway is not an EU member; it is an EEA member. But it is required to implement all the free movement law, including ECJ case law. So from the free movement perspective it makes no difference.jorgen41 wrote:As i understand it you are married to a Norwegian citizen hence she is not a EU member(Norway isnt a EU member as far as i know) and there for NO EU Directives apply.
(Switzerland is a little different, because ECJ case law does not apply, but that is a different discussion.)
I am married to an EU citizen and we are travelling together.
I am married to an EU citizen and we are travelling together. This is our marriage certificate.
I am married to an EU citizen and we are travelling together. This is our marriage certificate.
I am married to an EU citizen and we are travelling together. This is our marriage certificate.
Treena's case is where the EU citizen will be or is resident in a different EU member state. So two different countries EU countries are involved.treena.oakley wrote:I am [...] married to a Norwegian citizen who is moving to Sweden in less than a month. I am in the process of trying to join her in Sweden
Your case involves just one EU member state, namely Bulgaria.ming wrote:myself (non-EU family member of EU citizen) entering Bulgaria with my husband (EU Bulgarian citizen) after having already been residing in Bulgaria for the past approx 180 days
Directive/2004/38/EC wrote:Treena's case is where the EU citizen will be or is resident in a different EU member state. So two different countries EU countries are involved, as highlighted.treena.oakley wrote:I am [...] married to a Norwegian citizen who is moving to Sweden in less than a month. I am in the process of trying to join her in Sweden
Your case involves just one EU member state, namely Bulgaria, so EU free movement law does not apply.ming wrote:myself (non-EU family member of EU citizen) entering Bulgaria with my husband (EU Bulgarian citizen) after having already been residing in Bulgaria for the past approx 180 days
If your husband had worked in another EU member state, then you too would be able to use EU free movement law to move to Bulgaria.