If the OP is returning to the UK as the title suggests, then he needs a settlement visa, not a visitor visa. And malko, the UK is not one of the Schengen countries. If the OP decided to live anywhere else in Europe outside the UK, he could exercise his EU Treaty Rights and bring his spouse with him, and this is relatively easy (but again, take proper legal advice). So, for example, he could go and live in Spain or France or Bulgaria and he is legally entitled to live and work there with no restriction and also bring his wife with him. But he can't do this in the UK because he is a UK national.
It was just a thought...... I imagined if she had a schengen visa/ european residency, then it might help for the move back to the UK.
I got married in the dr. Visited the UK embassy in STo domingo. They told me no need to declare wedding, UK recognises dr wedding certificates.
They also told/warned me that if my children ( thar we dont have ), want to be british, I had to live 2 years in the UK ( I never lived in the UK, bit in france....). They also told me that my wife had to live with me for 5 years in the UK to be entiteled to a british passport, they didnt say anything about visas or such.
2 points. This was in 2011, so maybe things change.
Also I hadnt told them my wife was also swiss as well as dominican ( when the lady took a breath, I slipped it in....).
So my swiss/dominican wife and I live in france half the year, work in switzerland and visit the UK fom time to time.
No paperwork for my wife to live in france. I live in france on a british passport.
So just thougt if brits can live and work anywhere in europe, why not bring their spouse there, get documents amd then, from there go back to the uk.
Once again, I have no idea, it was just a thought.
You were told that your kids needed to live in the UK for 2 years before they could claim their British passport? Or have I somehow misunderstood this? Surely if you are British then they are British by descent.
Your situation always confuses me.You say your wife is Swiss/Dominican and you are a Brit but you've never lived in the UK.
If your wife already has residency in Switzerland or was born there ( not sure) there is absolutely no comparison to a Dominican that has never traveled out of the DR and has married a foreigner when it comes to getting a spousal visa.![]()
Wow, a confusing situation, I'm bamboozled. So you are British, does that mean born in the UK or you are British by descent?
A child born to a British parent outside of the UK can claim dual nationality, both as long as both countries allow that. I know Germany doesn't allow dual nationality. But I'm still a bit baffled by your situation.
Oh yeah, wifey is Haitian but same difference......
My wife our child and I came to live in England in early 2011. My mother sponsored my wife. Our child was automatically British as she is mine - she got a passport automatically in principle but there was a terrific amount of extra messing around to get it, mainly due to incompetence and general shoddiness of service. I did not have a job at the time and waaaay less than the pile of cash you need now - 65,000 squids?? Yikes!! (That's 100 dimes!)
If I now tried to move my family back to my home land to live like good little tax paying subjects and contribute to the general national good - well it just would never happen - impossible!
I have a polish friend who moved to the UK specifically to facilitate her Malawian husband getting a visa by some right of her being in the EU - as long as it was not her in home country - bizarre situation but many people in this position are heading to another country within the Euro-zone to work for a short period to get their non-EU spouse into Europe from where a UK visitor visa is a given.
Anyway, not to sound too gloomy but whatever else they are, the UK Border Agency are the most incompetent bunch of amoral buffoons you would ever dare worry about......
And it sucks that they are essentially forcing you to live apart from your family for at least 6 months until you qualify as a sponsor.
That's bollocks!
Makes perfect sense that you should have sufficient resources to support the person you want to bring into a country.
You are saying i could move to France ,Spain or any other European country with my wife at the same time. Dont i need to have a job??
But if I understood the OP correctly, ress8urces were not in the equation. Only the fact that he had to secure a job, work 6 months and earn 18 500 a year.
And of course he can hardly help being british.......