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Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by vikingsail
(Post 13079108)
Having just ordered a first time passport for a family member in the US. Time from receipt of documents by HM Passport to delivery of passport = 5-7 days. Application, payment and photos all done on HM Passport office online service: https://www.gov.uk/overseas-passports
As previously mentioned you are making this more difficult than it need be and potentially creating future issues which will be more of a headache to resolve. Is that even English? :unsure: |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by Revans18
(Post 13079103)
To everyone who responded that they got British passports while overseas, when did you get them? During the pandemic? Years ago? Last month? Just curious as I know the pandemic slowed the US passport service a lot. Thanks!
We renewed the kids passport last month from Canada. It took a bit longer than usual but still around 6 weeks. |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
I’m in Strasbourg, France and surrounded by other British friends and colleagues. We’re forever renewing our passports and the process has always been quick and painless.
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Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by durham_lad
(Post 13078356)
In 2016 my wife and I renewed our British passports while living in the UK. No problem but had to send in our US passports as well.
Our son also renewed his British passport in 2016 while he was living in the USA. His old passport had expired more than 10 years ago so had to apply as if for the first time. A little more documentation such as birth certificate needed but he only needed to send in a scanned copy of his US passport. It did make it easy the following year when he moved back for good, showed his British passport at our local GP offices to register with the NHS as soon as he arrived. |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by Nypool1e
(Post 13080119)
Hi Durham_lad, this is probably a stupid question but here goes. I’m returning home after 30 years in the US, as a British citizen with a British passport do I need to apply for any kind of visa to reside in the UK?
HTH. |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by christmasoompa
(Post 13080125)
No, as a citizen you have the right to live in the UK anytime you like. So if you're moving alone then you don't need to worry about visas, you'd only need a visa for a spouse or other family member that wanted to move with you and isn't a UK citizen.
HTH. |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by Nypool1e
(Post 13080119)
Hi Durham_lad, this is probably a stupid question but here goes. I’m returning home after 30 years in the US, as a British citizen with a British passport do I need to apply for any kind of visa to reside in the UK?
Originally Posted by christmasoompa
(Post 13080125)
No, as a citizen you have the right to live in the UK anytime you like. So if you're moving alone then you don't need to worry about visas, you'd only need a visa for a spouse or other family member that wanted to move with you and isn't a UK citizen.
HTH. Our son was only age 4 when we took him and his sister to the USA with us in 1987. In 2016 he decided to move back the following year so applied for and got a new British Passport. He'd never had one as an adult, and when he moved back in 2017 to join us he just walked right in, registered with the NHS, registered to vote, applied and got a job and also his first ever NI number. It really was as easy as that. He has a strong US accent having grown up in Louisiana and Texas and when asked where he is from he surprises most when he says "Middlesbrough" |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by durham_lad
(Post 13080132)
Exactly right.
Our son was only age 4 when we took him and his sister to the USA with us in 1987. In 2016 he decided to move back the following year so applied for and got a new British Passport. He'd never had one as an adult, and when he moved back in 2017 to join us he just walked right in, registered with the NHS, registered to vote, applied and got a job and also his first ever NI number. It really was as easy as that. He has a strong US accent having grown up in Louisiana and Texas and when asked where he is from he surprises most when he says "Middlesbrough" |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by Nypool1e
(Post 13080136)
Thank you for the response durham_lad, appreciate it. If you don’t mind my asking, did you have US citizenship whilst living there? The reason I ask is that even though I will be back home I still have to file US tax returns annually as I have dual citizenship, did you have this issue to deal with & if so how did you handle it? Thanks.
On the other hand both my wife and I do have foreign income and investments so we both have to file HMRC SA tax returns plus a joint US tax return every year. We use foreign tax credits (IRS form 1116) to offset the UK taxes. It is what it is. |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
My only comment would be, don't buy one way tickets.
They will be twice the price of a return ticket. Book a return 3 moths out from when you plan to move to the UK. Just don't bother turning up for the flight. No, you will not get any sort of refund. If you tell them you plan to do this then they could ask you for more $$ to cover the cost of the difference between a single and a return. We do this whenever cruising transatlantic. That's another thought, why not sail back on the Queen Mary2 ? Much more preferable to flying. Also no luggage allowance to worry about |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by durham_lad
(Post 13080145)
Yes, we all became US citizens while living in the USA. We file taxes in both the USA and UK every year. Our son has it easier than us as he converted his 401k into his existing Roth and has no other investments in the US. His Roth will be there for him when he is old enough and it will be tax free in both countries. That does mean that he gets away without doing any HMRC Self Assessment taxes as he has no foreign income so pays his HMRC taxes through PAYE. His US taxes are simple since he only has his UK job and excludes all of that with the FEIE form, 2555 when he file his US return each year.
On the other hand both my wife and I do have foreign income and investments so we both have to file HMRC SA tax returns plus a joint US tax return every year. We use foreign tax credits (IRS form 1116) to offset the UK taxes. It is what it is. |
Re: Finally, moving back to England!
I like your reply! Thank you! I am going to try for the British passports, as everyone on this thread tells me it is a simple process. Returning to the UK by ship—wow! Interesting idea…..
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Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by Revans18
(Post 13080241)
I like your reply! Thank you! I am going to try for the British passports, as everyone on this thread tells me it is a simple process. Returning to the UK by ship—wow! Interesting idea…..
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Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by Jerseygirl
(Post 13080242)
I have travelled Transatlantic on the QM2 many times. It’s a great way to travel to Southampton from NYC…or at least it was pre Covid.
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Re: Finally, moving back to England!
Originally Posted by Nypool1e
(Post 13080237)
How do you go about filing your US tax returns though Durham? Do you go to the IRS website & file online or do you hire a US accountant to file for you annually?
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