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Yes1. Am I able to apply for the naturalisation now using the 3 year qualifying period as I am married to a British citizen?
Yes, PR card first then you can apply for citizenship as soon as you have the PR proof.2. I take it that I need to apply for PR card. Once I receive it can submit my naturalisation application straight away?
No long absences is in your favour (fyi - any absence over 6 months would usually have broken your residence in UK).paulie12 wrote:Hi Noajthan.
What does it mean exactly to exercise treaty right as a qualified person? I was employed full time from Aug 2007 to July 2014.
I went on maternity leave from July 2014 to July 2015. I then resigned and am now a stay at home mom. I have never claimed any benefits (other than SMP).
No prolonged absences from the UK.
A self-sufficient person must not be a burden on the state (so no benefits) AND have CSI.paulie12 wrote:I had no idea that I needed CSI. I am covered under my husband's private insurance through his work so never considered anything else. Do I have to have it? Does me being a stay at home mom affect my application even though I don't claim any benefits?
A8 nationals were required to register WRS, OP did not do this so cannot count the time spent and working in the UK prior to May 2011.ohara wrote:The OP said they worked full time from August 2007 to July 2014, surely that's well enough to have acquired PR, in which case there would be no need to have had CSI once maternity leave started as there is no need to exercise treaty rights any more.
Or have I missed something
Yes, only if health cover counts as CSI.paulie12 wrote:Thanks guys. So in other words I can only apply for PR if my husband's policy can be used in lieu of CSI or wait till I have been married for 5 years?
Yep, the devil is in the detail.ohara wrote:Ah, I did miss something then
No, because you don't hold a visa under the UK Immigration rules in your Canadian passport, i.e. you don't hold a spouse settlement visa or an Ancestry visa if you qualified for one (both of which are also a 5 year route to ILR and costs substantially more than the EU route). There is no quick route unfortunately.paulie12 wrote:Is there anyway I can now try to start this process by using my Canadian passport? So try the angle of being married to a British citizen as a non EEA person?
Don't be too hard on yourself, the need for CSI and so on catches a lot of people unawares.paulie12 wrote:I can't believe this, I came on this board thinking I'll be able to apply now and it's turning out I have to wait 5 years? This is so frustrating. I'm wondering if there is a different way of approaching this - I have dual citizenship: I'm also a Canadian citizen. When I came to the UK I decide to use my EU passport thinking it would be much ease (no need for visa etc). How wrong was I. Is there anyway I can now try to start this process by using my Canadian passport? So try the angle of being married to a British citizen as a non EEA person?
noajthan wrote:
Incidentally, at the moment you may have a derivative right to reside via a school age 'child in education' (if s/he is attending primary/secondary school).
paulie12 wrote: I went on maternity leave from July 2014 to July 2015. I then resigned and am now a stay at home mom.
True.Petaltop wrote:noajthan wrote:
Incidentally, at the moment you may have a derivative right to reside via a school age 'child in education' (if s/he is attending primary/secondary school).
Her child is a 1 year old.
paulie12 wrote: I went on maternity leave from July 2014 to July 2015. I then resigned and am now a stay at home mom.
Now, does anyone know if it's any private insurance? Or the type of coverage it needs to be? Or how I can find out?9.11 For any period in which you were, or your sponsor was, a student or self-suf cient person, indicate below how you/they met the requirement to hold comprehensive sickness insurance cover (the insurance must also cover family members in the UK.)
Type of Insurance
European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) issued by an EEA member state other than UK (formerly form E111)
Form S1 (E106, E109, E121)
Form S2 (E112)
Form S3
Private Health Insurance Plan
The European Commission noted in its own guidelines on the implementation of Directive 2004/38 that:paulie12 wrote:...
However, I think I could get lucky on the private medical insurance aspect. I checked the PR application and point 9.11 states.
...
Now, does anyone know if it's any private insurance? Or the type of coverage it needs to be? Or how I can find out?
You could do worse than start here:Any insurance cover, private or public, contracted in the host Member State or elsewhere, is acceptable in principle, as long as it provides comprehensive coverage and does not create a burden on the public finances of the host Member State.
In protecting their public finances while assessing the comprehensiveness of sickness insurance cover, Member States must act in compliance with the limits imposed by Community law and in accordance with the principle of proportionality.
Dig into such vital questions here:paulie12 wrote:Thanks for coming back to me. I think I should be ok under 1) and I was also covered under my husband's health insurance during the time I was on maternity leave so even if I can't use that time as a qualified worker I should be able to use it as a self sufficient person. On point 3) - what proof of income do I need to provide? Is it monthly statements for the past 3 years? I'm assuming I can't just print them off, they will have to be originals provided by the bank?