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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
To be precise, time under other category does count to PR. However, time before marriage doesn't (unless you applied as unmarried couple).EUsmileWEallsmile wrote: Time spend in another category won't count toward her PR.
Thanks very much.EUsmileWEallsmile wrote:For your PR, generally you need to be living in the UK in accordance with the regulations for five years. You could apply for citizenship one year later.
For your wife's PR, she also would need to be living in the UK in accordance with the regulations for five years. Time spend in another category won't count toward her PR. She could apply for citizenship one year later.
Spouses of British citizens don't require to wait an extra year. It takes time to get citizenship approved.
Thanks very much Jambo. That makes perfect sense. It's a lot longer to wait than I was expecting, but that can't be helped. Thanks!!Jambo wrote:To be precise, time under other category does count to PR. However, time before marriage doesn't (unless you applied as unmarried couple).EUsmileWEallsmile wrote: Time spend in another category won't count toward her PR.
The quickest (but the most expensive) option is for you to apply for British citizenship in July 2014 (after 6 years of residence -5 years exercising treaty rights + 1 year after PR) and assuming you are approved, your wife to apply in November 2014 (5 years after marriage to obtain PR. if applying as spouse of BC, no need to wait 1 year).
This makes sense to me, and suggests that I could apply for PR for myself, and and then as soon as I received it my wife could apply (on her EEA4 form, instead of providing the evidence of 5 years of my exercising treaty rights, we would just tick the box saying I already have PR).Once an EEA national has acquired permanent residence through one of the Article 17 methods detailed in this section, their family members, irrespective of nationality, also acquire permanent residence in the UK. This is different from the acquisition of permanent residence under the five-year rule: if someone is or becomes the family member of a person who has acquired permanent residence in one of the ways described in this section, (s)he acquires permanent residence automatically, no matter how long (s)he has been here.
What I have read in forum across months, its 50-50 either way, members have applied with PR and without it. But it seems to me that without PR get delayed usually.rotor wrote:Thanks, I saw that, and it is useful, but I was hoping for someone who has been through the same experience and could offer any guidance or feedback.
No.rotor wrote:is there any way to bypass the new process,
I never applied for PR -- I went straight to Citizenship (and received it in just over 5 months).CR001 wrote:You could have included her in your PR application.
Ah OK. So total timeline is more like 12+ months. I'm dreading the EEA PR process as the form is so detailed and asks for so many things. The Citizenship one (done through NCS) was trivial by comparison.CR001 wrote:She will need PR and as soon as she receives it, she can apply for citizenship as the spouse of a British Citizen. No need to wait 12 months.