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Seven Questions and Seven Answers of Irish Immigrants

In recent years, many European immigrant countries are actively releasing various existing policies to attract immigrants from all over the world, and Ireland is one of the most prominent countries. The following are questions and answers from Irish immigrants. Welcome to read!

The first article seven questions and seven answers of Irish immigrants

Question 1: How long does it take to apply for approval? A: It takes an average of three to four months for an application to be approved, but it will take longer if the evaluation committee asks the applicant to provide more information.

Question 2: How long do I need to live in Ireland at least to meet the requirements of the immigration plan?

A: Applicants must stay in Ireland for at least 1 day in each natural year.

Question 3: What is the personal net worth in the Irish immigration plan?

Answer: Assets lawfully acquired through lawful business operations and business activities, assets acquired through inheritance, gift and/or divorce. Applicants need to prove that their net assets are at least 2 million euros.

Question 4: Can the assets owned by the spouse be used as evidence of a net worth of 2 million euros?

A: No, the assets owned by any other individual (including spouse) cannot be used as the applicant's personal net assets.

Question 5: If I get married or have children after obtaining the right of abode, can I add them as my family members and let them obtain the right of abode?

A: Yes, applicants can add spouses and/or dependent children under the age of 24 with permission. They can obtain the right of abode, but they need to provide marriage and/or birth certificates.

Question 6: If my application is rejected, can the application fee be refunded?

A: The application fee of 1500 Euro is non-refundable.

Question 7: Can I work, study or travel in other EU member states?

A: Ireland can only issue its own residence permit. The residence conditions of other EU member states should be consulted with their immigration offices.

The benefits of Irish immigration

1, English-speaking country: one of the six English-speaking countries in the world, second only to the English-speaking countries in the EU that Britain withdrew from the EU;

2. Outstanding education: high-quality British education, Irish people rank first in Europe in terms of higher education;

3. Broad development space for children: many world-renowned enterprises have settled in the EU headquarters;

4. Unique tax system: the corporate tax is only 12.5%, which is suitable for doing business, and overseas assets are not taxed if they are not repatriated to Ireland;

5. Stable political and economic environment: sustained and rapid economic growth, neutral country, stable political situation and simple and friendly people.

Due to the long-term implementation of development policies and reasonable macroeconomic policies, Ireland's economy has developed rapidly in recent years, and its industrial chains such as information content, pharmaceutical industry and financial industry have outstanding advantages in many EU member States. With Britain's "Brexit", Ireland, which is close to it, obviously made a fortune.

According to the annual immigration report of the Irish Ministry of Justice, Ireland accepted 140533 visa applications last year, an increase of 12% over the previous year. According to statistics, about 12 1000 visa applications were approved last year. The country with the largest number of visas is India, followed by China and Russian. In addition, the number of non-EEA residents in Ireland has also increased by 1 1%, approaching143,000.

More than 65,438+0,200 families applied for the Irish investment and residence program, of which more than 90% came from China, followed by 65,438+0.8% from the United States.

Extended Reading: Physical Examination Strategy for Irish Immigrants

Generally speaking, the physical examination of Irish immigrants focuses on two aspects. On the one hand, does the applicant have a serious infectious disease that affects the safety of the public, and on the other hand, is it possible to cause chronic diseases with high medical expenses?

Serious infectious diseases that affect public safety, such as tuberculosis and AIDS, are more common. In recent years, diseases such as tuberculosis are quite common in China. Many people don't have typical symptoms such as low fever, cough and emaciation after infection, and they don't know until X-ray shows lung calcification. The infection rate of tuberculosis in Ireland is very low, so tuberculosis is one of the serious diseases that Irish immigrants attach importance to in physical examination.

However, this does not mean that people who are unfortunately infected with tuberculosis can never immigrate or study in Ireland. Usually they need sputum culture for three days in a row. If the result is negative, it proves that there is no living Mycobacterium tuberculosis in their sputum, which is not contagious to the public, and X-rays can be rechecked three months later to prove that their tuberculosis focus is stable and there is no recurrence.

Therefore, after severe infectious diseases are generally completely cured, it is no problem to immigrate without affecting public health and safety.

What is more difficult to deal with is chronic diseases. In fact, chronic diseases are often not very serious, but because maintaining physical condition may increase Ireland's medical insurance expenditure, the immigration application will not be passed. The most common chronic disease is diabetes.

Usually, after a chronic disease is detected, it will be reported to the immigration officer according to the regulations, and the immigration officer will decide how to deal with it. If you are diagnosed with a chronic disease, but you want to emigrate, it is not completely impossible to turn over.