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Two questions there and the answers are ..... no ..... no !Is the residential period counted from the day you got married or the day you were granted FLR
No. You can submit your application now. Infact you were eligible to submit since your ILR on 4th Aug 2012.Mblay wrote:Thanks for reply, really appreciate, but kindly clarify this for me, I was granted my further leave to remain on 13th of May 2010, so does it mean I have to wait till 13th of May this year to do naturalisation?
ban.s wrote:Also see start of the residential qualifying period
it's counted from the date of the application, counting backward, not the otherway
So please confirm that you were physically in the UK on 04.04.2010.will send my application on Tuesday 2nd of April and if they receive it on the 3rd of April
So please confirm that you were physically in the UK on 04.04.2010.John wrote:will send my application on Tuesday 2nd of April and if they receive it on the 3rd of April
You've left out a couple of major ones from this list. In addition to being physically present in the UK exactly three years before the date on which the application is submitted and being free from immigration restrictions on the day the application is submitted, the applicant must also (a) be married to a UK citizen and (b) have spent no more than 270 days (although they will generally accept 300) outside of the country over those three years, and no more than 90 days out of the UK in the previous year.ban.s wrote:You just need to satisfy two main conditions (to naturalise as a spouse of a BC)
1. free from immigration restrictions at the time of the application - which you have since 4th Aug12
2. Physically present in the UK 3 years prior to the date of the application -
It doesn't matter whether you were on FLR or WHM or any other visa. As long as you were in the country legally on that date 3 year prior to your application, you'll satisfy the residential requirement.
A. Yes am married to a BC b. have only spent 40 days over the last three yrs n only 21 days the past 12 months,ajax wrote:You've left out a couple of major ones from this list. In addition to being physically present in the UK exactly three years before the date on which the application is submitted and being free from immigration restrictions on the day the application is submitted, the applicant must also (a) be married to a UK citizen and (b) have spent no more than 270 days (although they will generally accept 300) outside of the country over those three years, and no more than 90 days out of the UK in the previous year.ban.s wrote:You just need to satisfy two main conditions (to naturalise as a spouse of a BC)
1. free from immigration restrictions at the time of the application - which you have since 4th Aug12
2. Physically present in the UK 3 years prior to the date of the application -
It doesn't matter whether you were on FLR or WHM or any other visa. As long as you were in the country legally on that date 3 year prior to your application, you'll satisfy the residential requirement.
If the applicant is not an EEA citizen, I know of no country which will allow entry directly from the United Kingdom without stamping the bearer's passport. If your passport has an entry stamp into the UK before the -3Y date and has no entry stamp to any country until after the -3Y date, then it is physically impossible for you to have been absent from the UK (unless you did so without a passport...) on the -3Y date.Mblay wrote:A. Yes am married to a BC b. have only spent 40 days over the last three yrs n only 21 days the past 12 months,
My only worry now is how to prove I was physically present in the UK 3 yrs back although I was.
Am not an EEA national but have realised the country I visited didn't stamp my passport when I arrived there but was only an embankment stamp and a stamp when I returned to the UK.ajax wrote:If the applicant is not an EEA citizen, I know of no country which will allow entry directly from the United Kingdom without stamping the bearer's passport. If your passport has an entry stamp into the UK before the -3Y date and has no entry stamp to any country until after the -3Y date, then it is physically impossible for you to have been absent from the UK (unless you did so without a passport...) on the -3Y date.Mblay wrote:A. Yes am married to a BC b. have only spent 40 days over the last three yrs n only 21 days the past 12 months,
My only worry now is how to prove I was physically present in the UK 3 yrs back although I was.
I am virtually certain that this is checked in the passport records when the application is being processed; how else could you prove it?
Pardon my ignorance, but what's an embankment stamp?Mblay wrote:Am not an EEA national but have realised the country I visited didn't stamp my passport when I arrived there but was only an embankment stamp and a stamp when I returned to the UK.
Seriously am worried UKBA might think that's not enough proof.
Sorry I meant embarkment stamp , meaning a stamp showing when you left that country. I still have all my travel itinery for the last two holidays within the three years.ajax wrote:Pardon my ignorance, but what's an embankment stamp?Mblay wrote:Am not an EEA national but have realised the country I visited didn't stamp my passport when I arrived there but was only an embankment stamp and a stamp when I returned to the UK.
Seriously am worried UKBA might think that's not enough proof.
Do you have plane records, boarding cards, travel receipts, anything that can prove your trip?
Ah. So you have a stamp in your passport when you entered the UK the last time before the -3Y date. And you have a stamp in your passport leaving a country other than the UK sometime after the -3Y date (and presumably you have a stamp in your passport showing that you entered the UK shortly after you departed that other country, again this is sometime after the -3Y date).Mblay wrote:Sorry I meant embarkment stamp , meaning a stamp showing when you left that country. I still have all my travel itinery for the last two holidays within the three years.
How do think that will be enough proof?
Really appreciate ur replies. Thx
You right, will contact NCS. That's very helpful. Thx Ajax.ajax wrote:Ah. So you have a stamp in your passport when you entered the UK the last time before the -3Y date. And you have a stamp in your passport leaving a country other than the UK sometime after the -3Y date (and presumably you have a stamp in your passport showing that you entered the UK shortly after you departed that other country, again this is sometime after the -3Y date).Mblay wrote:Sorry I meant embarkment stamp , meaning a stamp showing when you left that country. I still have all my travel itinery for the last two holidays within the three years.
How do think that will be enough proof?
Really appreciate ur replies. Thx
What you are missing is the stamp showing that you entered the other country sometime after the -3Y date, thus proving that you were indeed present in the UK on the -3Y date; presence is of course required for the application to be successful.
Your best bet would be to contact the nationality help centre; they are usually very good and should be able to advise you in this case. Ultimately we could recommend something or say that it worked for a friend of ours (indeed, when my application for naturalisation was approved, I simply sent in copies of my passport and that was that), but we won't know for certain and will only be speculating.
Contact the help centre and get a definitive answer about what you need to do.
Best wishes to you.
I submitted my application and was approved.. below was my time lineMblay wrote:You right, will contact NCS. That's very helpful. Thx Ajax.ajax wrote:Ah. So you have a stamp in your passport when you entered the UK the last time before the -3Y date. And you have a stamp in your passport leaving a country other than the UK sometime after the -3Y date (and presumably you have a stamp in your passport showing that you entered the UK shortly after you departed that other country, again this is sometime after the -3Y date).Mblay wrote:Sorry I meant embarkment stamp , meaning a stamp showing when you left that country. I still have all my travel itinery for the last two holidays within the three years.
How do think that will be enough proof?
Really appreciate ur replies. Thx
What you are missing is the stamp showing that you entered the other country sometime after the -3Y date, thus proving that you were indeed present in the UK on the -3Y date; presence is of course required for the application to be successful.
Your best bet would be to contact the nationality help centre; they are usually very good and should be able to advise you in this case. Ultimately we could recommend something or say that it worked for a friend of ours (indeed, when my application for naturalisation was approved, I simply sent in copies of my passport and that was that), but we won't know for certain and will only be speculating.
Contact the help centre and get a definitive answer about what you need to do.
Best wishes to you.