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Celerity

(46,235 posts)
Fri Oct 4, 2019, 10:43 AM Oct 2019

Here's how Brits can get permanent residency in Sweden after a no-deal Brexit

Sweden's justice and migration minister has told The Local more about the special residence permits expected to be issued to Brits after a no-deal Brexit.

https://www.thelocal.se/20191004/brexit-swedens-justice-migration-minister-answers-readers-questions-about-brits-in-sweden

Sweden has already issued a one-year grace period for Brits in the event that the UK crashes out of the EU without a deal on October 31st. But it has long been unclear exactly which rules would apply after that. "If there would be a hard Brexit without a deal, the 20,000-25,000 Brits living in Sweden would lose their residence permit in Sweden overnight. So if we don't do anything they would no longer have the right to stay and the police would in practice come and send them out of the country. And we don't want to do that," Morgan Johansson, minister for justice and migration, told The Local in a telephone interview.

A new proposal put forward by the government on Thursday states that new regulations, in the event of a no-deal Brexit, would give Brits who already have a permanent right of residence (permanent uppehållsrätt) in Sweden a permanent residence permit (permanent uppehållstillstånd). EU citizens automatically enjoy permanent right of residence if they have been living in another EU country for five years. Brits who have lived here a shorter period of time but meet the requirements for right of residence would receive a five-year residence permit, which Johansson told The Local they would have to apply for.

"It requires you to for example have a job, run a business, be a student or having enough means to support yourself. If you are retired you need to be able to support yourself on your pension, and so on. Those are the same rules, really, that today apply to British citizens living in Sweden," he said. "And then after those five years on a temporary permit you can apply for a permanent residence permit in Sweden."

EU citizens are according to the rules of freedom of movement able to stay in Sweden for up to three months. After that they in theory need to be able to support themselves, but this is rarely enforced. "The difference here is that we don't carry out an assessment of EU citizens [and their ability to support themselves], but we are going to do that in the case of Brits," said Johansson. The new rules would also apply to the family members of Brits living here at the time of Brexit.

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more at the link above
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Here's how Brits can get permanent residency in Sweden after a no-deal Brexit (Original Post) Celerity Oct 2019 OP
I suggest ripping the families apart and caging their children... ret5hd Oct 2019 #1
All this because the Brits... Thyla Oct 2019 #2
so will Sweden take some desperate, yet rational Americans? hlthe2b Oct 2019 #3
it will definitely be easier for an american to come to Sweden than the UK after a hard Brexit, Celerity Oct 2019 #4

ret5hd

(21,320 posts)
1. I suggest ripping the families apart and caging their children...
Fri Oct 4, 2019, 10:49 AM
Oct 2019

maybe shoot them in the legs if they run. And definitely sharks with lasers.

Celerity

(46,235 posts)
4. it will definitely be easier for an american to come to Sweden than the UK after a hard Brexit,
Fri Oct 4, 2019, 12:12 PM
Oct 2019

barring some special bilateral deal the UK might make withe the US (which I do not see happening.)

The Riksdag is proposing a new law that will enable foreign, non-EU graduates (of Swedish universities) to be automatically allowed to stay on for a full year and look for work, which will lead to a permanent resident permit, and then citizenship after 3 to 5 years.

If you have in-demand skills and the placement qualifies for a shortage area, it is also not that hard to move here. Not easy, but deffo not impossible. I know many Americans here who have done it via both routes.

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