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The cut-off date itself has yet to be decided, but will be no earlier than 29 March 2017 and no later than the date of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.
Key points of the proposal are as follows:
For those EU nationals who arrived before the cut-off date:
For those EU nationals who arrived after the cut-off date:
For non-EU national family members:
It will be impractical for the Home Office to issue a high volume of residence documents immediately after the UK leaves the EU, but it will be necessary to avoid a legal gap between the end of free movement rights and the point at which individuals apply for and obtain UK immigration status. The Government will therefore bridge this gap by providing a period of blanket residence permission, to start immediately upon the UK’s exit from the EU.
This will be a generic ‘umbrella’ of temporary leave applying to all existing lawful EU residents (and their families), to give them a grace period between the moment that free movement ends and the time they obtain their residence document. This will allow EU nationals to remain lawfully in the UK and continue to undertake their lawful business during that interim period – they will not be required to leave the UK at the point the UK leaves the EU. The grace period of blanket permission will last from exit day for a fixed period of time, which is yet to be confirmed but is expected to be up to two years. Applications made during the grace period will be done so on a voluntary basis and the scheme should be operational some time during 2018. Once the grace period expires it will then become mandatory for EU nationals in the UK to apply for a residence document to confirm their status, if they have not done so already.
The publication of the proposal will be welcome news to many as we finally have a more concrete indication of how the future of EU nationals in the UK will look from an immigration perspective post Brexit, but of course it does all rely on the forthcoming negotiations and the UK Government being able to secure a similar deal for UK nationals living and working in the EU.
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