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That applies to non-EEA family members applying from within the EU. For example: you(Irish) and your Peruvian wife live in France, and wish to apply for the Family Permit and relocate to the UK. In order to make the application from France, she would have to prove that she was lawfully resident in France. Since she is applying from her own country outside the EU, that wouldn't apply to her.The rules now state that, in order to be issued with an EEA family permit, the non EEA spouse/partner must have been lawfully resident in the other EEA country before applying to enter the UK.
Just to add...If the spouse visa was granted on the basis of the Irish passport, the wife will have to wait for 5 years to get naturalised. The 3 years would only be applicable if made on the basis of the British citizenship.yankeegirl wrote:Option #2 is expensive but she would be able to apply for British citizenship after 3 years if she wanted
That's not quite true. If spouse is a British citizen then the 3 year waiting time for naturalisation always applies, irrespective of how the person obtained UK immigration.Docterror wrote: Just to add...If the spouse visa was granted on the basis of the Irish passport, the wife will have to wait for 5 years to get naturalised. The 3 years would only be applicable if made on the basis of the British citizenship.
That's quite nice to know. So, in this case, the OP's wife can apply for the EEAFP on the basis of the OP's Irish citizenship and after 3 years use the "ppron method" and get naturalised using the OP's British citizenship? Amazing!JAJ wrote:If spouse is a British citizen then the 3 year waiting time for naturalisation always applies, irrespective of how the person obtained UK immigration.
Yes. It's not possible to "switch track" to the domestic UK Immigration rules (other than leaving the UK and applying from scratch) but the nationality rules are structured differently.Docterror wrote: That's quite nice to know. So, in this case, the OP's wife can apply for the EEAFP on the basis of the OP's Irish citizenship and after 3 years use the "ppron method" and get naturalised using the OP's British citizenship? Amazing!
One big disadvantage will be waiting longer for a British passport. In the meantime she'll likely need visas to travel pretty much anywhere with her Peruvian passport.PAVA10 wrote: 3) Our primary objective once married is to be together. The fact the EEA route is less of a burden and even costs nothing more than far outweighs the fact that my wife would likely need to wait 5 years before calling herself a British Citizen. What, if any, are the other practical day to day disadvantages of the 5 year wait?