US Citizenship
Hi.
UK married to US spouse 3years. Still living in UK at present, planning a move to AZ in August. Husband has 'Indefinite Leave to Remain' in UK right now. I have Immigrant Visa (valid until 29/09/06) I suggested to husband that he should apply for British Citizenship before we leave for USA (we have been married 3+ years) but he is (being American!) wary of taking UK citzenship in case it invalidates his US citizenship. I have told him this is not the case - that he cannot lose US citizenship unless he formally relinquishes it - but he is not convinced! Experiences please? Or websies for concrete info? Thanks....... |
Re: US Citizenship
slap him with a wet fish for being so silly :D
Your right, unless he specifically relinquishes it, he won't lose his US citizenship just by getting Brit citizenship. There are plenty of links knocking around this forum though... but here's one to start with - http://www.richw.org/dualcit/faq.html |
Re: US Citizenship
Hiya!
Wow, August, eh? Getting close now! Tell hubby to go for the UK citizenship. He can hold dual citizenship w/o relinquishing his USA citizenship, and it will make it so much easier to go back and forth! :) Best Wishes, Rene |
Re: US Citizenship
Originally Posted by britnyank
... wary of taking UK citzenship in case it invalidates his US citizenship.
Ian |
Re: US Citizenship
Slap him really hard.
It would only take him 5 minutes on a computer to confirm this.
Originally Posted by Bob
slap him with a wet fish for being so silly :D
Your right, unless he specifically relinquishes it, he won't lose his US citizenship just by getting Brit citizenship. There are plenty of links knocking around this forum though... but here's one to start with - http://www.richw.org/dualcit/faq.html |
Re: US Citizenship
Originally Posted by janadeen
Slap him really hard.
It would only take him 5 minutes on a computer to confirm this. |
Re: US Citizenship
Noorah101 wrote:
> > Hi. > > UK married to US spouse 3years. Still living in UK at present, > > planning a move to AZ in August. > > Husband has 'Indefinite Leave to Remain' in UK right now. > > I have Immigrant Visa (valid until 29/09/06) > > I suggested to husband that he should apply for British Citizenship > > before we leave for USA (we have been married 3+ years) but he is > > (being American!) wary of taking UK citzenship in case it invalidates > > his US citizenship. > > I have told him this is not the case - that he cannot lose US > > citizenship unless he formally relinquishes it - but he is not > > convinced! Taking British citizenship will not cause him to lose his US citizenship. Check out http://www.richw.org/dualcit/ I can speak from experience, as I hold both US and British citizenship (and Canadian citizenship too). |
Re: US Citizenship
My missus had the same thoughts, but had a re-think and will go for it if and when we go back.
|
Re: US Citizenship
In article <[email protected]> ,
ian-mstm <member2954@british_expats.com> wrote: >> Hi. >> UK married to US spouse 3years. Still living in UK at present, >> planning a move to AZ in August. >> Husband has 'Indefinite Leave to Remain' in UK right now. >> I have Immigrant Visa (valid until 29/09/06) >> I suggested to husband that he should apply for British Citizenship >> before we leave for USA (we have been married 3+ years) but he is >> (being American!) wary of taking UK citzenship in case it invalidates >> his US citizenship. >> I have told him this is not the case - that he cannot lose US >> citizenship unless he formally relinquishes it - but he is not >> convinced! >> Experiences please? >> Or websies for concrete info? >> Thanks....... >I hold both UK and US citizenship. It is not an issue. >Ian Don't be so quick to judge the man as "silly" (not necessarily you, Ian, but the people in this thread).. I had to relinquish my german citizenship in order to accept Canadian citizenship. Otherwise, I'd be dual with a chance at triple citizenship in a couple of years.. So, while the US does the sensible thing, not ALL countries do.. MH |
Re: US Citizenship
Originally Posted by Mh
Don't be so quick to judge the man as "silly" (not necessarily you, Ian, but the people in this thread).. I had to relinquish my german citizenship in order to accept Canadian citizenship. Otherwise, I'd be dual with a chance at triple citizenship in a couple of years.. So, while the US does the sensible thing, not ALL countries do.. |
Re: US Citizenship
In article <[email protected]> ,
Bob <member27413@british_expats.com> wrote: >> In article <[email protected]> , >> ian-mstm <member2954@british_expats.com> wrote: >> >> Hi. >> >> UK married to US spouse 3years. Still living in UK at present, >> >> planning a move to AZ in August. >> >> Husband has 'Indefinite Leave to Remain' in UK right now. >> >> I have Immigrant Visa (valid until 29/09/06) >> >> I suggested to husband that he should apply for British Citizenship >> >> before we leave for USA (we have been married 3+ years) but he is >> >> (being American!) wary of taking UK citzenship in case it >> >> invalidates >> >> his US citizenship. >> >> I have told him this is not the case - that he cannot lose US >> >> citizenship unless he formally relinquishes it - but he is not >> >> convinced! >> >> Experiences please? >> >> Or websies for concrete info? >> >> Thanks....... >> >I hold both UK and US citizenship. It is not an issue. >> >Ian >> Don't be so quick to judge the man as "silly" (not necessarily you, >> Ian, but >> the people in this thread).. I had to relinquish my german citizenship >> in >> order to accept Canadian citizenship. Otherwise, I'd be dual with a >> chance >> at triple citizenship in a couple of years.. >> So, while the US does the sensible thing, not ALL countries do.. >> MH >That's true, though Germany does allow dual citizenship, you've just got >to get an approval permit thingy before applying for another >citizenship... Since when? I tried to read up on the laws 2 years ago when I got Canadian citizenship, and it was basically "you have to show strong ties to Germany to keep citizenship if you accept foreign citizenship". I couldn't really do that.. MH |
Re: US Citizenship
I had read the same thing, might want to check the current position, I do not remember the details, just that with Germany it was a bit more complicated.
|
Re: US Citizenship
Originally Posted by Mh
Since when? I tried to read up on the laws 2 years ago when I got Canadian citizenship, and it was basically "you have to show strong ties to Germany to keep citizenship if you accept foreign citizenship". I couldn't really do that.. |
Re: US Citizenship
In article <[email protected]> ,
Bob <member27413@british_expats.com> wrote: >> In article <[email protected]> , >> Bob <member27413@british_expats.com> wrote: [cut - sorry if I messed up the quotes] >> >That's true, though Germany does allow dual citizenship, you've just >> >got >> >to get an approval permit thingy before applying for another >> >citizenship... >> Since when? I tried to read up on the laws 2 years ago when I got >> Canadian >> citizenship, and it was basically "you have to show strong ties to >> Germany >> to keep citizenship if you accept foreign citizenship". I couldn't >> really do >> that.. >> MH >Not being a German, I ain't all that bothered and never really read up >on it in all that much detail...but, I've read a few times on this forum >of germans getting dual citizenship over the last couple of years, and >also a friend of my mother who is german got dual citizenship. Yeah, it's certainly much more easily POSSIBLE now, but not for someone like me who was born there, but hasn't lived there in 25+ years.. http://www.germany.info/relaunch/inf...uergerung.html (German Consulate in USA - info in german for german citizens) basically says exactly what I said before (my german isn't 100% anymore, please forgive me if I miss-paraphrase some of the technical wording): As of Jan 1, 2000, a new law for citizenship rights became official. It contains new regulations for keeping citizenship when aquiring foreign citizenship. This makes it substantially easier for Germans living in the USA who wish to obtain US citizenship to also keep their german citizenship. ... In principle, accepting foreign citizenship causes loss of german citizenship. ... The new law removes many criteria previously required to keep german citizenship, and makes it much easier to do so. ... however, requires consideration of public and private interest. For an applicant whose domicile is outside of Germany, special consideration will be given as to whether or not he has continuing ties to Germany. Such ties could consist of: relationships with close relatives, property, living quarters, rent or insurance contracts(?), corporate ownership, bank accounts, schooling and/or apprenticeship training in Germany, regular trips to Germany, multi-year stays in Germany. ... Also, those who are temporarily in a foreign country where that is of advantage to Germany or their family (something like that). --- I was born there, left when I was 8 (my family emigrated). I have aunts and uncles and cousins. I've been back twice since we left. We left in '79, I've been back in '82 and '03. Only attended grades 1 and 2 in Germany. I have absolutely no close ties. My parents could probably do this: my dad has siblings, spent probably 30 years there, has a pension from Germany, etc.. For me - after looking at that list, I didn't even bother. MH |
Re: US Citizenship
Originally Posted by UKintheUSA
Question for all of you that hold UK/USA DUAL Citizenships.
Can both spouses have DUAL? Seems to me a great idea and solution for the retirement years! If I can apply now after 1 1/2 years of marriage to a UK Citizen, what's the procedure and how expensive/involved is it? Deb PS-sorry if anyone thiks I am hijacking this post, but I thought it was a good question to add to this one...............:) and I am very much considering doing this ASAP! I believe you have to actually live in the UK to qualify for citizenship... |
All times are GMT. The time now is 3:36 pm. |
Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.