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The EEA national is 23 years old. He is currently a student, graduating in May 2017 (same time as me), currently looking for graduate employment. He has an EHIC card.secret.simon wrote:How old is the EEA national? How is s/he exercising treaty rights? If a student, does s/he have CSI (private health insurance) or a non-UK EHIC card?
Also, typically a "durable partner" needs to prove two years of living together. That is not pure EU law, but the UK's implementation of EU law.
If you both have a legal basis to be in the UK (i.e. you have a valid visa) you do not need to leave the country.cityofedinburgh wrote: 1. Should we both leave the UK and I apply for EEA FP?
The above being said, there is an argument for you choosing to submit your application overseas, and a big one for that matter: Processing time. While you are under no obligation to leave the UK to do this, the fact that there are many more EEA EFP applications within the UK means you have to wait for 6 months to get your application processed if submitted here. If you go to your country of origin, you could "jump the queue" and wait much less time to get a family entry visa there, by virtue of fewer applications in your local processing office (this obviously depends what the processing times are in your country, do check if it is worth it). The downside is, this way you can only get a 6-month family entry permit, and then you need to apply for the real EEA EFM RC once you are in the UK (and wait the 6 months to get it -there is no escape). However, see argument below.Then we fly back into the UK and I apply for EEA EFM? As an unmarried partner I will have no right to work in the 5-6 months wait for the RC, so is having the FP for 6 months to cover that seem like a good idea?
That is another potential argument for applying overseas.As a Malaysian, I am aware that I don't need a visa to enter the UK anyways (for 6 months) but in that time I will have no right to work/study/NHS, which I am worried about.
If by May 2017 you are eligible to apply, yes you can apply.2. Should I just apply for EEA EFM straight away in May 2017?
As long as you submit your application before your current visa expires, you will technically not be considered an overstayer as you will have a pending application. However, if your application is refused, you could then be an overstayer.As my Tier 4 visa expires in 30/09, I am worried I won't get the RC in time, I'll have to leave the UK/be an overstayer. Will the EEA EFM application extend my permission to stay in the UK?
With these circumstances I would say better to wait to apply in July 2017, if you have proof of cohabitation for July 2015-May 2016 and July 2016-July 2017. Best to have to explain only one gap, not two.3. Another thing that might be challenging is my partner and I are both university students (graduating May 2017). In May-June 2015 and May-June 2016, we were living together in my partner's parents' house. So we don't have any tenancy agreements/utility bills etc. We have flight tickets, photos and a letter from his parents that state that we lived with them. Is this sufficient?
That is not entirely correct. Section 3C leave, that covers you if you submit an application while you have existing leave, does not apply to EEA-route applications. So, pending EEA applications do not attract any protection against overstay.kamoe wrote:As long as you submit your application before your current visa expires, you will technically not be considered an overstayer as you will have a pending application. However, if your application is refused, you could then be an overstayer.