The quickest and easiest way to apply for a residence permit is to apply online. An online application goes directly to the Swedish Migration Agency and is given priority. If you cannot or do not want to apply over the Internet, you can fill in a paper form that you submit in person to the Consulate General.
The description below applies to you if you are the citizen of a country outside the EU/EEA and wish to move to live with a family member who is also a citizen of a country outside the EU/EEA or is a Swedish citizen.
How to proceed (for applications on paper forms, see further down):
1. Prepare your documentation Check which documents and personal data you require. The Swedish Migration Agency gives priority to applications that are completed in full, and you get a decision sooner.
Read more under ‘Required documents’.
2. Applying Follow the Swedish Migration Agency's instructions for applying online over the Internet. You attach documents electronically and pay the application fee using a VISA card or a MasterCard.
Swedish Migration Agency web application
3. Your family member must answer questions Your family member has to fill in a questionnaire. Once you have sent in your application, he or she will automatically receive an email with instructions. The family member must reply to the questions within two weeks.
4. Visit the embassy/consulate Wait for the email you receive asking you to make an appointment at the embassy. Only then will the Swedish Migration Agency have gone through both your application and your family member’s replies and have transferred your case to the embassy.
You make an appointment by [ange lokala regler, telefonnummer, öppettider etc/describe your routines, how appointments should be made, phone number, opening hours etc.]
At the embassy, you have to prove your identity by showing your passport, and you will be interviewed. Children applying for a residence permit are also interviewed. If the child is too young or too immature, the person looking after the child is interviewed instead.
Bring along the originals of the documents you attached to your online application. In its email, the Swedish Migration Agency may also have asked you to bring additional documents with you. You may need to be photographed and fingerprinted for the residence permit card you will receive if you are granted a residence permit. This also applies to children.
You can find the address of the embassy under ‘Contact’ in the menu on the left.
After the interview, your case is transferred back to the Migration Agency in Sweden. If you have neither attended the interview nor made contact with the embassy, your case is nevertheless sent to the Swedish Migration Agency, and your application may be rejected.
5. Wait for the decision When the Swedish Migration Agency has reached its decision, you will be informed of this by email. The actual decision will be sent to your family member in Sweden, if you have authorised him or her to represent you.
6. Wait for the residence permit card If you are granted a residence permit, you will be issued with a residence permit card.
If you need a visa to enter SwedenIf you need a visa to enter Sweden, the card is ordered automatically if you have already been photographed and fingerprinted. If you have not been photographed and fingerprinted, you should visit the Consulate General. Bring your passport.
It can take up to four weeks for the residence permit card to be made and delivered to the consulate.
If you do not need a visa to enter SwedenIf you have been granted a residence permit and do not require a visa, you travel to Sweden and arrange for the card there. Contact the Swedish Migration Agency to have your photograph and fingerprints taken.
How to proceed:
1. Prepare your documentation Check which documents and personal data you need. The Swedish Migration Agency gives priority to applications that are completed in full, and you get a decision sooner.
Read more under ‘Required documents’ and on the Swedish Migration Agency website.
2. Pay the application fee
Read more under ‘Fees’.
3. Present your application at the embassy
Bring alonog the completed application form together with all your documents and the receipt of payment.
You can find the address of the embassy under ‘Contact’ in the menu on the left.
4. Visit the embassy At the embassy, you will be interviewed. Children applying for a residence permit are also interviewed. If the child is too young or too immature, the person looking after the child is interviewed instead.
You may be photographed and fingerprinted for the residence permit card you will receive if you are granted a residence permit. This also applies to children.
After the interview, your case is sent back to the Migration Board in Sweden. If you have neither attended the interview nor made contact with the embassy, your case is nevertheless sent to the Swedish Migration Board, and your application may be rejected.
5. Wait for the decision The Swedish Migration Board’s decision will be sent to your family member in Sweden, if you have authorised him or her to represent you. [Lägg till lokala regler om vem som kontaktar vem/describe the routines. Exempel: Otherwise you will be informed of the decision by the embassy, which will contact you by calling the telephone number you provided when applying for a residence permit.]
6. Wait for the residence permit card If you are granted a residence permit, you will be issued with a residence permit card. You arrange for the card in the same way as described above under ‘Applying online’.