4L: Born in UK in 1990 to Non-Settled Parents, but w/ British-born Grandmother
#1
Thread Starter
Just Joined
Joined: Apr 2026
Posts: 2

Hi! I long have had to explain how I was UK-born but not a UK citizen but recently discovered I might actually be able to fix that and am very excited. Am I correct in thinking my UK place of birth / UK grandmother makes my 4L / Form ARD application a slam dunk without having to pay fees given this scenario?
Counterfactual Timeline (parents were all married at time of births, if that matters):
Counterfactual Timeline (parents were all married at time of births, if that matters):
- 1924 (Maternal Grandmother's Birth): Born in the UK, Citizen of the UK and Colonies (CUKC) "otherwise than by descent." Born to my American grandfather in the UK.
- 1954 (Mother’s Birth): Because my grandmother was British-born, she would have passed her citizenship down to my mother. If the law had treated men and women equally, my US-born mother would have automatically become a CUKC by descent at birth. When the British Nationality Act 1981 took effect, my mother's CUKC status would have automatically converted into being a British citizen by descent.
- 1990 (My Birth): Born in the UK to non-settled parents on active duty with US Navy. But Under Section 1(1) of the BNA 1981, any child born in the UK after 1983 is automatically a British citizen if, at the time of birth, at least one parent is a British citizen.
#2
That's a very interesting scenario, but yes, you would appear to have a claim. Can I ask whether your mother have any Canadian-born ancestors?
#3
Thread Starter
Just Joined
Joined: Apr 2026
Posts: 2

Also realize I misspoke: "Born to my American grandfather in the UK." should have been "Married to my American grandfather in the UK."
Last edited by bjgx703; Apr 19th 2026 at 5:54 pm.
#4
In that case in the unlikely event your Section 4L application isn't accepted then you will certainly qualify for a UK Ancestry visa providing you can get your Canadian citizenship recognised.







