New I.D. card rules

Seat 0A wrote:georgeingozo wrote:Yep HNWI is one of the special schemes.
Thanks George, that would mean I have to use Form S.
Given that I am not in possession (yet) of 2 of the required documents, it would seem that going on Form J (economic self-sufficient) is the easier approach.
Any downsides to that?
Thanks
Not only easier, but from a tax point of view much cheaper. Basically you only pay tax on money transferred to Malta. No minimum tax involved. Also withholding tax paid overseas will be deducted in proportion. The HNWI schema is much more severe. That is why only a handful of people have applied I think.
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CEA/EXP/1/2004
Sir
Your e-mail hereunder refers.
As regards the new ID/Residence Cards system please consult the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (). Go to Services and then to Residence. There you would find various application forms and you have to indentify which ones would apply in your cases.
When you do apply, apart from the completed (applicable) forms, you have to bring with you:
1) your Registration Certificate, Residence Card;
2) your expired (Maltese) ID Cards;
3) the completed Form ID 1A which you can download from the website mentioned above – the penultimate Form under Residence.
Your attention is being drawn to the fact that you have to submit the applications in person by appointment. You can send an e-mail to: eResidence.info@gov.mt for an appointment.
Delay is regretted
Regards
Joseph Treeby Ward
Adviser
Citizenship & Expatriate Affairs
why not write direct to their office that seems to work
I was wondering I gotten my ID this October. I first got notice of this dumb new ID at work (not by the bloody goverment) here in Febuary. So I wrote a mail to get an appointment for a new ID card. However, never got a reply, even after sending two more mails. I try to call them, but got in a unending line.
So if I have to stay in Malta until August or September this year do I require the new ID card and if I do any suggustion on how to get it?
I am doing an internship. However, I get no payment only the grants from back home. I am from Denmark so I am a EU citzen.
Another thing my old ID card, it doesn't work with the discount at the arriva busses anymore does it?
Because I never got a clear answer back from Arriva
Marlene
"do I require the new ID card and if I do any suggustion on how to get it?" - yes you do, but you've fulfilled your legal obligation by asking for an appointment. Even if you get an appointment, its unlikely to be before July.
What the residence certificate? The only residence certification I have is my ID card and that old voting card from my city.

Its total chaos!
Grizabella wrote:A colleague at work emailed weekly, got an appointment on one day, then a second appointment for a week later!
Its total chaos!
can sell the 2nd one on maltapark
georgeingozo wrote:Grizabella wrote:A colleague at work emailed weekly, got an appointment on one day, then a second appointment for a week later!
Its total chaos!
can sell the 2nd one on maltapark
Popova A wrote:rainbow3 wrote:Just an update, sent couple of emails in February, sent a letter on Monday and received an appointment by email today for end of July so looks like things are being moved along, hope others receive their appointments soon too.
Wow good news
Can you tell me the email address please?
deborap7 wrote:Popova A wrote:rainbow3 wrote:Just an update, sent couple of emails in February, sent a letter on Monday and received an appointment by email today for end of July so looks like things are being moved along, hope others receive their appointments soon too.
Wow good news
Can you tell me the email address please?
eresidence.mfa@gov.mt ... Good luck.. We are still waiting for those blessed cards 
Popova A wrote:deborap7 wrote:Popova A wrote:
Wow good news
Can you tell me the email address please?
eresidence.mfa@gov.mt ... Good luck.. We are still waiting for those blessed cards
Thanks but I tried to send an email to that address and it came back (Delivery Status Notification... In February I sent 2 emails and I received no answer...I'm still trying to get an appointment...I feel hopeless... 
deborap7 wrote:Popova A wrote:deborap7 wrote:
Can you tell me the email address please?
eresidence.mfa@gov.mt ... Good luck.. We are still waiting for those blessed cards
Thanks but I tried to send an email to that address and it came back (Delivery Status Notification... In February I sent 2 emails and I received no answer...I'm still trying to get an appointment...I feel hopeless...
Very very normal....its a complete mess!
deborap7 wrote:I live in Gozo then I think I'll send a letter...hoping they'll answer one day...thanks
..appoitments are given at the moment for end August 
What is the deal when you arrive in Malta and fail to get an appointment in time for a (Non-Eu) spouse?
According to some members here - There are now pushing appointments as far back as August.
Are Non-Eu spouses going to keep extending their Visas?
If that is the case and she arrived on a Tourist Visa, (Schengen Visa) then there is a limit to the extensions – Does that mean she has to get out of the country and reapply?
This is getting ridiculous Â…Â…. Hope there are thinking broadly about this debacle!
I am new to the forum, but have been following the various adventures related in this thread with great interest.
Clearly, I was tempting fate when, a couple of weeks ago, I casually mentioned to my spouse that it was wonderful that this year our residence papers were finally all in order. Little did I know...
My situation is as follows:
I am British, retired, self-sufficient, with a non-EU spouse. We reside in Malta, and we have both ID cards and residence documents. (Today I sent an email to the MoFA to request an appointment, and so far it has not bounced).
May I ask two specific questions?
They are as follows:
1) Let us assume we are given an appointment (I'll be keeping my autumn diary free), is there anyone in a comparable situation to ourselves who can advise what actual application forms we would need to bring? I have scrutinized 'eye-test chart' of form options, but am still not entirely sure.
Aside from the ID 1A and ID2 forms for each of us, am I correct that I would need the Form J (self-sufficient person)? And, for my non-EU wife, should we complete the CEA Form F...or CEA Form G? I am keen to avoid being sent away because we were armed with the wrong papers. Thank you.
2) My second question is about international travel for my wife. My wife has a Residence Card (specifically, a "Residence Card of a Family Member of a Union Citizen") with an expiry date of 2016. If we do not manage to obtain e-cards before June 30th, will she still be able to use her Residence Card (together with her passport, of course) to enable her to travel freely back-and-forth from Malta to outside Europe? Or, is it the case that from July 1st 2013 entry into Malta without an e-card will become difficult for her?
I have read contradictory answers regarding this, and would prefer her to be able to reenter the Schengen Area...you know... being married 'n' all.
Does anyone have clarification on this point, please?
Thank you for your time.
With regards,
lmg1000
lmg1000 wrote:Aside from the ID 1A and ID2 forms for each of us,
foreigners only fill in ID 1A, not ID2
lmg1000 wrote:2) My second question is about international travel for my wife. My wife has a Residence Card (specifically, a "Residence Card of a Family Member of a Union Citizen") with an expiry date of 2016. If we do not manage to obtain e-cards before June 30th, will she still be able to use her Residence Card (together with her passport,
as things stand, her residence card expires end June this year
As regards your second post, you seem to be extremely well connected!
Thank you for your reply.
We recognize that the residence card will expire as a proxy for an ID card at the end of June.
However, separately, what I wish to establish is whether it will also expire as a supportive document for intercontinental travel. I was inferring from some sources that it would still be accepted for this purpose...or is that incorrect?
Thank you for your help.
lmg1000 wrote:am I correct that I would need the Form J (self-sufficient person)? And, for my non-EU wife, should we complete the CEA Form F...or CEA Form G?
you J, your wife F (G is for family member of non-EU, and you are EU)
lmg1000 wrote:Hi georgeingozo.
Thank you for your reply.
We recognize that the residence card will expire as a proxy for an ID card at the end of June.
However, separately, what I wish to establish is whether it will also expire as a supportive document for intercontinental travel. I was inferring from some sources that it would still be accepted for this purpose...or is that incorrect?
Thank you for your help.
the official announcement is that it expires end June - if it expires, it should be for all purposes. In reality, who knows. I personally wouldn't try to use it.
georgeingozo wrote:lmg1000 wrote:Hi georgeingozo.
Thank you for your reply.
We recognize that the residence card will expire as a proxy for an ID card at the end of June.
However, separately, what I wish to establish is whether it will also expire as a supportive document for intercontinental travel. I was inferring from some sources that it would still be accepted for this purpose...or is that incorrect?
Thank you for your help.
the official announcement is that it expires end June - if it expires, it should be for all purposes. In reality, who knows. I personally wouldn't try to use it.
Oh dear. It's as bad as that?
This is certainly an interesting strategy for document processing: make it up as you go along. No wonder the MoFA staff are getting frayed.
Thank you for your considered view.
toonarmy9752 wrote:i am certainly expecting confusion when the new e-res cards appear in use.
they already are in small numbers, and after initial problems people as saying they are being accepted on buses and the ferry
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