Common Law wife
Common Law wife
On the Migri site,in regard to the length of time necessary to get citizenship it says:
Residence period
for the last five years without interruption (continuous period of residence) or
for a total of seven years after you reached the age of 15 (accumulated period of residence). Of these seven years, you must have lived in Finland for the past two years without interruption.
A shorter period of residence is sufficient in certain cases
You have a Finnish spouse
If your spouse is a Finnish citizen, it is enough that you have lived in Finland
for the last four years without interruption (continuous period of residence) or
for a total of six years after you reached the age of 15. Of these six years, you must have lived in Finland for the past two years without interruption (accumulated period of residence).
In addition, you must live with your spouse, and must have done so for at least three years. If your spouse is deceased but he or she was a citizen of Finland, you must have lived with him or her for at least three years before his or her death.
‘Spouse’ refers to a husband, wife, common-law husband or wife, and persons living in a registered relationship.
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Does that means that if I've been living with my girlfriend(finnish)for the last 4 years,we are common laws?Even if not married?
Residence period
for the last five years without interruption (continuous period of residence) or
for a total of seven years after you reached the age of 15 (accumulated period of residence). Of these seven years, you must have lived in Finland for the past two years without interruption.
A shorter period of residence is sufficient in certain cases
You have a Finnish spouse
If your spouse is a Finnish citizen, it is enough that you have lived in Finland
for the last four years without interruption (continuous period of residence) or
for a total of six years after you reached the age of 15. Of these six years, you must have lived in Finland for the past two years without interruption (accumulated period of residence).
In addition, you must live with your spouse, and must have done so for at least three years. If your spouse is deceased but he or she was a citizen of Finland, you must have lived with him or her for at least three years before his or her death.
‘Spouse’ refers to a husband, wife, common-law husband or wife, and persons living in a registered relationship.
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Does that means that if I've been living with my girlfriend(finnish)for the last 4 years,we are common laws?Even if not married?
Re: Common Law wife
common-law husband or wife = avopuoliso, couple who live together. avopuoliso is not aviopuoliso (married couple). marriage is marriage. extra laws are applicable to married people, mainly inheritence, adoption etc. Whether 4 years of living together quality you for citizenship, well it should provided that you fulfill other requirements such as 'A' permit for the past 4 years among others.Y77 wrote:
Does that means that if I've been living with my girlfriend(finnish)for the last 4 years,we are common laws?Even if not married?
“Go where you are celebrated – not tolerated."
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"Aina, kun opit uuden sanan, opettele samalla sen monikko!"
Re: Common Law wife
Law means legal,documented by common law, which is a registered event.
You dont qualify, but this is finland and im an english speaker.
You dont qualify, but this is finland and im an english speaker.
Re: Common Law wife
There is no register for those except that the population register shows them living in the same house or flat. So I guess the OP should qualify.cors187 wrote:Law means legal,documented by common law, which is a registered event.
Last edited by Rip on Sun Jun 09, 2013 4:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Common Law wife
Yes.Y77 wrote:‘Spouse’ refers to a husband, wife, common-law husband or wife, and persons living in a registered relationship.
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Does that means that if I've been living with my girlfriend(finnish)for the last 4 years,we are common laws?Even if not married?
"common-law" a bad translation, the Finnish and Swedish versions of the Migri page make it clearer.
Re: Common Law wife
Would be a bit hard to be considered a common law wife under Finnish law given that it is a civil law system...
But they mean cohabiting, nothing registered just that you have been living together in a relationship.
T
But they mean cohabiting, nothing registered just that you have been living together in a relationship.
T
- Pursuivant
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Re: Common Law wife
Maybe they should just say "living in sin""common-law" a bad translation,

Anyways, you need "proof" which is basically is you have had the same address in maistraatti... kids might be another giveaway.
Usually though this is more of an issue thats believed as a "statement".
Last edited by Pursuivant on Fri Jun 14, 2013 9:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- jahasjahas
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Re: Common Law wife
"Domestic partner(ship)" might be a better translation, but I guess common law husband/wife is used more often.
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Re: Common Law wife
I'm sorry if this sounds negative but as a British born resident of Finland (twenty years) you will not get citizenship without a successful written and spoken Finnish language test, no matter what anyone tells you, I speak from experience !
Re: Common Law wife
If you do not even pass a Finnish test at B1 level after 20 years in Finland that is your fault, and you cannot complain that you won't get citizenship when you refuse to learn the local language.Lord of Manchester wrote:I'm sorry if this sounds negative but as a British born resident of Finland (twenty years) you will not get citizenship without a successful written and spoken Finnish language test, no matter what anyone tells you, I speak from experience !
It is irrelevant for the discussion here, since language and residence period are two completely different requirements from the list of requirements that all have to be fulfilled for acquiring citizenship.
Re: Common Law wife
exactly,that's why I'm getting ready for the level 3 Yleiset kielitutkinnot required for Citizenship. If I fail that I'll move to a council estate in Glasgow and apply for British citizenship,the requirement there is that you must have lived at least 4 years with Common Lowlife ahahahahahah!Lord of Manchester wrote:I'm sorry if this sounds negative but as a British born resident of Finland (twenty years) you will not get citizenship without a successful written and spoken Finnish language test, no matter what anyone tells you, I speak from experience !

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Re: Common Law wife
yes but if I were to do that I would endorse the already widespread inferiority complex that Finns feel against Sweden and also I don't approve of Swedish being an official language in Finland,it might be easier to learn but the easy way out is not always the right solution.interleukin wrote:Or you learn Swedish, MUCH easier than Finnish for an English speaker.
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Re: Common Law wife
Well how much Y77 approves of Swedish or not is pretty irrelevant, the big question is how important that citizenship is for the OP.


- jahasjahas
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Re: Common Law wife
...for the OP who is Y77?interleukin wrote:Well how much Y77 approves of Swedish or not is pretty irrelevant, the big question is how important that citizenship is for the OP.