Change, change, change! If you are an EEA national, or a family member of one, read this now!

The change is in the British nationality legislation regarding EEA nationals and their family members. It came in force on 12 November 2015 and has completely overhauled the way we used to work when helping EEA nationals and their family members to apply for British Citizenship.

EEA nationals and their direct family members (spouses, civil partners, children under 21 yo, dependant parents) gain automatic rights to reside in the UK, the right deriving from the European law. Subject to some conditions, such as exercising Treaty rights in the UK, but not subject to having to apply for a ‘visa stamp’. Visa stamp or not, they get their rights. It includes non-EEA direct family members, even though most still apply for a Residence Card.
After 5 years they qualify for permanent residency, EEA equivalent of Indefinite Leave, again automatically, without having to apply for a document confirming it (those who applied did so voluntarily). With ILR or without, it was possible to apply for British Citizenship as long as the conditions of qualifying for ILR were met. So it was about qualifying for permanent residency but not necessarily applying for it.

The above rules have not changed, ie the European Regulations have not changed.
The change was made in the nationality law. From 12 November 2015 EEA citizens and their family members have to apply for a formal document to confirm their right of permanent residency in the UK – if they want to apply for British Citizenship. Those who apply for British Citizenship are now expected to have this document first. Those who aren’t applying for British Citizenship still don’t have to apply for permanent residency.

It looks like the burden of proving this right was shifted from the Nationality department at the UK Visas and Immigration (UKVI) to the EEA department. All Nationality department now has to do to judge permanent residency status is to simply look at the document issued by the EEA department (prior to that the Nationality department had to do all that work themselves).

For an individual advice or to make your application as successful please contact us: info@1st4immigration.com , we reply on the same working day. Or visit www.1st4immigration.com

If you are an Immigration Adviser or a Solicitor, and also need advice on the Rules, please email info@1st4immigration.com or visit our immigration Training and CDP website: www.1st4immigration.com/training   

Popular posts from this blog

Updated May 2020: UK visa work continues - latest update

🇬🇧 Spouse vs Fiancée visa: pros and cons

UK Visas and Immigration plans to go paperless in 2018. If it works, family visas – for spouses, partners, children etc – will be submitted online instead of the current paper forms and supporting documents.