The Withdrawal Agreement protects EU citizens and their family members who moved to the United Kingdom before 31 December 2020 (so–called transition period) and guarantees them broadly the same rights they had before the UK withdrew from the EU: they can continue to live, study, work in the United Kingdom and travel ...
The Withdrawal Agreement protects all those family members who have lawfully resided with a United Kingdom national in the host EU state before the end of the transition period. You are allowed to stay but had to apply for a new residence status under the national residence scheme before the end of the grace period.
The Withdrawal Agreement allows EU Member States to set a deadline by which resident United Kingdom nationals and their family members must apply for a new residence status or risk losing their rights under the Withdrawal Agreement.
The Withdrawal Agreement between the UK and the EU will be an international agreement binding both parties as a matter of public international law. This has consequences for both parties, in ance with the normal principles of their internal legal orders.
If you were lawfully resident in an EU country before 1 January 2021, your rights are protected by the Withdrawal Agreement. You continue to have broadly the same rights to live, work, study and access benefits and services as you had before Brexit. Read: EU information about the Withdrawal Agreement.
Withdrawal Agreement beneficiaries who have resided legally in the host State in ance with Union law for a continuous period of 5 years acquire the right to reside there permanently. Bulgaria, Czechia, Germany, Estonia, Ireland, Greece, Spain, Croatia, Italy, Cyprus, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal and Slovakia.
Frontier worker permit The Withdrawal Agreement states that a State may require frontier workers to apply for a document certifying that they have such rights under Title II. Likewise, a frontier worker may request the host state to issue them with such a document.
Under the Withdrawal Agreement, a frontier worker is someone who works or is self-employed in one country and resides in another country. You can continue working in the host EU state while residing in London.
The Withdrawal Agreement protects all those family members who have lawfully resided with a United Kingdom national in the host EU state before the end of the transition period. Adopted children are treated in the same way as biological children.