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Settled and pre-settled status
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- Who needs to apply
- Dates and deadlines applicable to the EUSS
- UPDATE: Impact of COVID19 on EUSS applications
- Help and support for vulnerable citizens
- Application summary
- Proving your identity
- Using the app
- Using the online form
- Viewing and updating your status
- Proving and sharing your status with others
- Your rights with status
- Resolution Centre
- Criminal convictions
- How your data is used
- Applying from abroad
- Upgrading pre-settled to settled status
- Applicants requiring help to apply
Residence
- Residence criteria
- How residence is assessed
- Absences and residence for people with pre-settled status
- Providing evidence
- Documents
- Multiple applications and re-applying
- Applying with PR
- Applying with ILR
Family members
- Applications from family members
- Children
- Applying with a biometric card
- Applying without a biometric card
- Getting a EUSS biometric card
- Evidence
- Spouses and civil partners
- Unmarried partners
- Children, grandchildren and great grandchildren
- Parents, grandparents and great grandparents
- Extended family members and dependent relatives
- EUSS Family permit
- Dual UK/EU citizens (Lounes)
- Surinder Singh
People with pre-settled status need to make sure they spend at least 6 months out of every 12, in the UK, in order to qualify for settled status.
If you have pre-settled status, you will need to make a new application for settled status, it will not be granted automatically.
If your children are not British, they will also need settled or pre-settled status after the end of June, even if born in the UK.
The deadline for most people to apply under the EUSS is the end of June 2021.
You need to apply for settled status if you applied for citizenship with PR and will not have your ceremony before the end of June.
Citizenship applications
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- Overview
- Step-by-step guide
- When can I apply for citizenship?
- Issues, mistakes, errors and omissions
- Application timeframes
- How to apply
- PR, ILR or settled status requirement
- Applications based on marriage
- Biometrics
- Cover letter
- Impact on family members
- Dual citizenship
- German nationals
AN form
- Application overview
- Applying with PR, ILR and settled status
- Family applications and dependents
- Immigration applications
- Timescale to complete the form
- Expired passports
- BRPs
- Issues with names
- Referees
- Employment and self-employment
- Adding notes to the form
- Downloading a PDF of the form
- UKVCAS services
- Submitting and booking your appointment
Absences and residence
Lawful residence
- Lawful residence for applicants relying on settled status
- The good character guidance, treaty rights and CSI
The Good Character requirement
- Convictions, cautions, warnings, judgments
- Speed fines and awareness
- Parking tickets and motoring offences
- Breaches of immigration requirements
Language and Life in the UK
- The language requirement
- Degrees and other qualifications
- Exemptions
- Booking your language test
- Life in the UK
- Practice for your LITUK test
After you apply
Children citizenship
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- Citizenship for children born in the UK
- How children acquire citizenship
- Children born in the UK to a British parent
- Children of naturalised British nationals
- Children of Irish nationals
- Children born abroad to a British parent
- Children and their rights to citizenship
- Registration of UK born children
- Children born abroad
- Children of British parents - UKF and UKM
- Referees for children
- Passport applications for UK born children
- The Windrush Scheme
- Sample ILR documents
- Data request to the Home Office
- Application Document Return Service
- National Insurance records
- Complaining to the Home Office
- UKVCAS services
- Preparing documents for UKVCAS appointment
- Translations
- Authorised translators
- SAR (data request) to obtain information
- Nationalities requiring entry clearance (visa nationals)
EEA residence - for reference only
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- Permanent Residence (PR) status and how it's acquired
- Qualifying periods and evidence - example scenarios
- Absences
- Evidence of residence
- Bank statements
- Loss of PR status and ILR through absence from the UK
- Benefits (public funds)
- Disabled persons
- Carers
- The Workers Registration Scheme (WRS)
- Bulgarian and Romanian nationals
Employment, self-employment and job seeking
- Evidence of employment
- Low earnings, part-time work and intermittent work
- Maternity leave, pregnancy and childbirth
- Self employment
- Evidence of self-employment
- Unemployment, job seeking and gaps
- Charity work and volunteering/unpaid work
- Au-pairs
Sponsorship, dependants and family applications
- Sponsoring family members
- Dependent children
- Evidence for dependants and family applications
- Evidence for couples living together
Studies, self-sufficiency and CSI
- Evidence for students
- Evidence for self-sufficient persons
- Minimum income to be self-sufficient
- Income and/or savings from British or non EEA partner
- Evidence of Comprehensive Sickness Insurance (CSI)
- Where does the CSI requirement come from?
- EHIC cards and CSI
- Voluntary NI contributions
- Using the NHS and paying for treatment
Categories
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Article Tags
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- absences (5)
- an application (36)
- biometrics (5)
- british passport (8)
- children citizenship (15)
- citizenship (46)
- dual citizenship (7)
- employment (4)
- evidence of residence (5)
- family members (12)
- ilr (7)
- language requirement (6)
- language test (4)
- life in the uk (5)
- names (4)
- nationality (8)
- naturalisation (44)
- permanent residence (12)
- pre-settled status (4)
- referees (4)
- registration (11)
- settled status (35)
- ukvcas (8)
- windrush (5)
- wrs (4)