| >>But the important point is the question I asked: have they suggested that a visa will be required to enter the country? They haven't. They are just saying that the free movement will end, meaning that as an EU citizen you don't have the automatic right to enter the UK....but no alternative was offered. EU citizens are inelligable for all UK visas right now anyway, because they are specifically worded in such a way and would need to be changed. >>I am talking about the existing permanent resident status under EU law. And this might be strange to some, but you can be totally elligable for the full settled status but not for the permanent residence card(I was in this exact situation - I have lived in the UK for 8 years, but the first 4 "don't count" towards the permanent residence status because I was a student without private health insurance(which was only added as a requirement after I started my studies) - but I still got the full Settled Status because that doesn't care why you were here, only if you lived here 5 years or more). >>My understanding is that visa-free travel will continue so it should not really matter whether you can prove status. Which again is an issue, because it might mean that legally you don't have the right to be here at all, it's just that the border controls are letting it slide for a while until some other system is put in place. Which causes a whole set of other issues, like this time not counting towards any citizenship application(or making it impossible in the first place, since you are here "illegally"), being unable to rent a place or use the NHS. |
As I understand it, that was always a requirement due to the wording of the treaties (or regulations / directives).
It is just that UK government hadn't previously highlighted that they viewed NHS entitlement as not counting as "medical insurance".
There is supposed to be an ongoing dispute with the Commission over this point.
See here and links from it: https://www.freemovement.org.uk/comprehensive-sickness-insur...