Step-by-step - Family Reunification - Danish Rules - With Updates
: 16.07.2023 15:06:41
Your spouse has come up to you and is now planning to move in with you. In other words, you want to be reunited as spouses. You can use this guide as a chronological reference work of what to do and what to be aware of. The overview is organised chronologically, so you can jump in right where you are in the process.
If you have minor children with Danish citizenship, scroll down to frame/comment no. 3 of this Step-by-Step and read about the special rules regarding this.
A. DO YOU FULFIL THE REQUIREMENTS?
1. the housing requirement:
You must have your own home. This means that the home must be in your name. It must not be owned by anyone else, unless it is a co-operative home or a home in a housing association. As a rule, the home must not be shared with others. The home must be at least 20 square metres per person (measured on the entire living space) OR there must be a maximum of 2 people per livingroom or bedroom. Please note that you do not have to fulfil both size requirements. If you both move here from abroad, there is a "coming home" rule, which means that the housing requirement must be met no later than 6 months after you arrive. However, the application for family reunification must be submitted no later than one month after your arrival in Denmark if you are on the coming-home rule.
2. Backward-looking self-support:
If you are already living in Denmark, you must not have received benefits under the Act on Active Social Policy (the Active Social Policy Act) in the 36 months prior to the application for spouse reunification, nor while the case is being processed. The benefits include cash benefits, rehabilitation, integration benefit, educational assistance and resource programme benefits. It can also include individual one-time benefits, such as help from the municipality for a dental bill. Unemployment benefits from the unemployment insurance fund, sickness benefit, housing allowance, child allowance and child cheque, free childcare, etc. have no consequences for family reunification, neither before, during or after. When it comes to benefits under the Active Social Policy Act, it does not help to offer to pay back the amount. Just the fact that you have received one or more benefits under the Active Social Policy Act or the Integration Act is enough to set the table.
3. Future self-support:
As long as your spouse is in the country on a temporary residence permit, both you and your spouse are barred from receiving benefits under the Active Social Policy Act or the Integration Act. The list of "prohibited" and permitted benefits is listed in section 2 above. Receipt of "prohibited" benefits may result in cancellation of your residence permit or refusal to extend an existing residence permit. It doesn't matter whether we are talking about 50 øre or 50,000 kroner.
4. Bank guarantee:
You must be able to provide a bank guarantee in the amount of DKK 113.823,30 in 2024-level (approx. 15.272 euro). The guarantee must only be provided when specifically requested by the Danish Immigration Service. The guarantee can be provided in two ways, and you agree with the bank which one suits you best. One is called deposit, which means that you hold all the money in your hand and ask for it to be placed in a separate account and blocked. The other is called a demand guarantee, where the bank provides the guarantee on your behalf and you pay a fee four times a year to the bank to manage it for you. A demand guarantee requires credit approval. The money is locked for 10 years. You usually have 3 weeks to provide the guarantee, but again: Wait until you are specifically told to go to the bank. The bank guarantee increases by 2% every year at New Year.
5. integration requirements:
There are a total of 6 requirements here. The first three are for the person already living in Denmark, while the last three are for your spouse. In total, you must fulfil 4 of the 6 requirements. It doesn't really matter how they are divided between you, as long as you fulfil 4 requirements in total. However, requirement no. 1 for you is mandatory and relates to your schooling. The other requirements are about language skills, education and work experience. Be thorough when reading through the requirements. The smallest hair in the soup and you won't fulfil the requirement in question.
6. Your marriage/cohabitation:
The marriage must be recognised under Danish law. You may have been married in other countries, in which case it must have taken place according to the normal customs and laws of the country in question. Your marriage cannot be recognised if one of you was under 18 years of age at the time of the marriage. Marriages by proxy, forced marriages and arranged marriages are also not recognised. If you are not married, you must have lived together at a common, permanent address for at least 18 months prior to the application for family reunification. Alternate visa visits to each other do not count as permanent cohabitation. The date of marriage has nothing to do with the 24-year rule.
7. 24 years rule:
This rule has two purposes: to avoid forced and arranged marriages and to ensure that young people complete their education before creating a family. In relation to family reunification, the rule means that both parties must be at least 24 years old before they can be granted family reunification. However, you can submit the application as soon as the younger of you is 23½ years old. Applications submitted before that time will be rejected.
8. The visitation requirement:
This requirement is often misunderstood. Officially, it is stated that the foreign national must have visited Denmark at least once. Some believe that the foreign national must complete their entire first visa visit here, then return home and only on their next visit can they apply for family reunification. If the purpose is to keep the airlines alive, that's probably a nice thought, but the requirement really only covers the fact that the foreign national has been in the country for a single overnight stay at some point in their life. Then they can apply for family reunification. If the foreign national is outside Denmark and has never been here before, but still applies for family reunification directly, the application will be rejected. However, if the person has been in Denmark before, they can submit their application either here in Denmark or to a Danish embassy.
9. Stepchildren:
If you have children from a previous relationship (known in law as stepchildren or special children) with whom you have a permanent connection, you must disregard the housing requirement, all financial requirements and the integration requirements in the above points. The same applies if you cannot be directed to exercise your family life in the spouse's home country because of your sexual or religious orientation or because of a severe disability. However, you must pay the fee for the application for family reunification, which will be refunded once the case processing is complete if you fulfil the conditions in section 9.
10. Be thorough:
It is important that you delve into every little detail of every single requirement to find out if you fulfil it. This is because the smallest little mistake they can find in the Immigration Service costs a rejection of the entire application - even if everything else far outweighs the error. And the Immigration Service is deliberately looking for errors. So be thorough.
If you have minor children with Danish citizenship, scroll down to frame/comment no. 3 of this Step-by-Step and read about the special rules regarding this.
A. DO YOU FULFIL THE REQUIREMENTS?
1. the housing requirement:
You must have your own home. This means that the home must be in your name. It must not be owned by anyone else, unless it is a co-operative home or a home in a housing association. As a rule, the home must not be shared with others. The home must be at least 20 square metres per person (measured on the entire living space) OR there must be a maximum of 2 people per livingroom or bedroom. Please note that you do not have to fulfil both size requirements. If you both move here from abroad, there is a "coming home" rule, which means that the housing requirement must be met no later than 6 months after you arrive. However, the application for family reunification must be submitted no later than one month after your arrival in Denmark if you are on the coming-home rule.
2. Backward-looking self-support:
If you are already living in Denmark, you must not have received benefits under the Act on Active Social Policy (the Active Social Policy Act) in the 36 months prior to the application for spouse reunification, nor while the case is being processed. The benefits include cash benefits, rehabilitation, integration benefit, educational assistance and resource programme benefits. It can also include individual one-time benefits, such as help from the municipality for a dental bill. Unemployment benefits from the unemployment insurance fund, sickness benefit, housing allowance, child allowance and child cheque, free childcare, etc. have no consequences for family reunification, neither before, during or after. When it comes to benefits under the Active Social Policy Act, it does not help to offer to pay back the amount. Just the fact that you have received one or more benefits under the Active Social Policy Act or the Integration Act is enough to set the table.
3. Future self-support:
As long as your spouse is in the country on a temporary residence permit, both you and your spouse are barred from receiving benefits under the Active Social Policy Act or the Integration Act. The list of "prohibited" and permitted benefits is listed in section 2 above. Receipt of "prohibited" benefits may result in cancellation of your residence permit or refusal to extend an existing residence permit. It doesn't matter whether we are talking about 50 øre or 50,000 kroner.
4. Bank guarantee:
You must be able to provide a bank guarantee in the amount of DKK 113.823,30 in 2024-level (approx. 15.272 euro). The guarantee must only be provided when specifically requested by the Danish Immigration Service. The guarantee can be provided in two ways, and you agree with the bank which one suits you best. One is called deposit, which means that you hold all the money in your hand and ask for it to be placed in a separate account and blocked. The other is called a demand guarantee, where the bank provides the guarantee on your behalf and you pay a fee four times a year to the bank to manage it for you. A demand guarantee requires credit approval. The money is locked for 10 years. You usually have 3 weeks to provide the guarantee, but again: Wait until you are specifically told to go to the bank. The bank guarantee increases by 2% every year at New Year.
5. integration requirements:
There are a total of 6 requirements here. The first three are for the person already living in Denmark, while the last three are for your spouse. In total, you must fulfil 4 of the 6 requirements. It doesn't really matter how they are divided between you, as long as you fulfil 4 requirements in total. However, requirement no. 1 for you is mandatory and relates to your schooling. The other requirements are about language skills, education and work experience. Be thorough when reading through the requirements. The smallest hair in the soup and you won't fulfil the requirement in question.
6. Your marriage/cohabitation:
The marriage must be recognised under Danish law. You may have been married in other countries, in which case it must have taken place according to the normal customs and laws of the country in question. Your marriage cannot be recognised if one of you was under 18 years of age at the time of the marriage. Marriages by proxy, forced marriages and arranged marriages are also not recognised. If you are not married, you must have lived together at a common, permanent address for at least 18 months prior to the application for family reunification. Alternate visa visits to each other do not count as permanent cohabitation. The date of marriage has nothing to do with the 24-year rule.
7. 24 years rule:
This rule has two purposes: to avoid forced and arranged marriages and to ensure that young people complete their education before creating a family. In relation to family reunification, the rule means that both parties must be at least 24 years old before they can be granted family reunification. However, you can submit the application as soon as the younger of you is 23½ years old. Applications submitted before that time will be rejected.
8. The visitation requirement:
This requirement is often misunderstood. Officially, it is stated that the foreign national must have visited Denmark at least once. Some believe that the foreign national must complete their entire first visa visit here, then return home and only on their next visit can they apply for family reunification. If the purpose is to keep the airlines alive, that's probably a nice thought, but the requirement really only covers the fact that the foreign national has been in the country for a single overnight stay at some point in their life. Then they can apply for family reunification. If the foreign national is outside Denmark and has never been here before, but still applies for family reunification directly, the application will be rejected. However, if the person has been in Denmark before, they can submit their application either here in Denmark or to a Danish embassy.
9. Stepchildren:
If you have children from a previous relationship (known in law as stepchildren or special children) with whom you have a permanent connection, you must disregard the housing requirement, all financial requirements and the integration requirements in the above points. The same applies if you cannot be directed to exercise your family life in the spouse's home country because of your sexual or religious orientation or because of a severe disability. However, you must pay the fee for the application for family reunification, which will be refunded once the case processing is complete if you fulfil the conditions in section 9.
10. Be thorough:
It is important that you delve into every little detail of every single requirement to find out if you fulfil it. This is because the smallest little mistake they can find in the Immigration Service costs a rejection of the entire application - even if everything else far outweighs the error. And the Immigration Service is deliberately looking for errors. So be thorough.