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Statute · EU Directive 2003/86

EU law caps family-reunification decisions at nine months. No exceptions.

Article 5(4) of EU Directive 2003/86 (the Family Reunification Directive) sets a maximum decision-term of nine months for family-reunification applications. The figure is a ceiling, not a target. Member States must decide within nine months; any longer term in national law is overridden. The Netherlands also has a shorter three-month term in Vw 25 for most regular permits. Both apply in parallel: whichever expires first opens the procedural lever.

EU FRD 5(4) · 9-month ceiling overrides any longer national rule

The text

Article 5(4): "The competent authorities of the Member State shall give the person, who has submitted the application, written notification of the decision as soon as possible and in any event no later than nine months from the date on which the application was lodged. In exceptional circumstances linked to the complexity of the examination of the application, the time-limit referred to in the first subparagraph may be extended."

Nine months is the ceiling. The Court of Justice of the EU has held that the "exceptional circumstances" exception must be interpreted narrowly. Routine staffing or backlog do not qualify.

Direct effect in Dutch courts

Directive 2003/86 has direct effect in the Netherlands. The Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU) confirmed in K. and A. v. Netherlands (C-153/14, 2015) that the directive's procedural guarantees, including the 9-month ceiling, are directly invokable. Dutch courts must apply Article 5(4) without further legislative intervention; the directive overrides any longer Dutch term.

How it interacts with Vw 25

ProcedureDutch national term (Vw 25)EU ceiling (FRD 5(4))Effective term
Regular MVV family reunification3 months9 months3 months (Dutch shorter)
Nareis (asylum-derivative family reunion)3 months (Vw 25)9 months3 months
Family of EU citizens (free-movement)Different regime: 6 months under Directive 2004/38Not applicable6 months (Free-Movement Directive)
Other family3 months9 months3 months

In practice the Dutch 3-month term in Vw 25 is the operative deadline for most family-reunification files. The 9-month EU ceiling is the absolute backstop: even if the file is procedurally complex, no decision beyond nine months can be justified without invoking the narrow "exceptional circumstances" exception, and the CJEU has held that exception to a high bar.

The "exceptional circumstances" exception

Article 5(4) sub-paragraph 2 lets Member States extend the 9-month term in exceptional circumstances linked to the complexity of the examination. The CJEU in K. and A. read this narrowly: only genuine complexity (e.g. document authenticity disputes, parallel criminal proceedings) qualifies. Routine workload, sickness of staff, summer holidays and end-of-year backlogs do not. The exception must be reasoned in writing if invoked, and the applicant has a right to challenge it.

What this means for the Notice of Default

For a family-reunification file in the Netherlands, the procedural lever opens whenever the Dutch 3-month term in Vw 25 has been breached. The 9-month EU ceiling rarely comes into play because the Dutch shorter term opens the route first. The EU ceiling matters for two situations: (a) the IND argues that a longer national term applies due to a parallel proceeding, and (b) the IND invokes the exceptional-circumstances exception and the case heads to court.

Where MigrationProvision sits

Every family-reunification Notice we draft cites both Vw 25 (the operative national term) and Article 5(4) (the EU ceiling). The dual citation signals that the file is procedurally complete and discourages the IND from invoking the "exceptional circumstances" exception without genuine grounds. For cases that head to court, the EU citation strengthens the Awb 6:12 appeal and supports the parallel ECHR Article 8 argument.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

What does EU FRD Article 5(4) say?
Member States must decide family-reunification applications within nine months. The term may be extended only in exceptional circumstances linked to complexity. Routine staffing or backlog do not qualify.
Does the EU 9-month term replace the Dutch 3-month term?
No. The EU 9-month term is a ceiling, not a floor. The Dutch 3-month term in Vw 25 is shorter and remains the operative national deadline. Whichever expires first opens the procedural lever.
Is the EU directive directly invokable in Dutch courts?
Yes. The Court of Justice of the EU confirmed in K. and A. v. Netherlands (C-153/14, 2015) that the procedural guarantees of the directive, including Article 5(4), have direct effect in the Netherlands.
What counts as exceptional circumstances?
Genuine complexity in the examination, narrowly interpreted by the CJEU. Document-authenticity disputes, parallel criminal proceedings, or substantively unusual cases. Workload, holidays, staffing shortages do not.
Does Article 5(4) apply to nareis (asylum-derivative family reunion)?
Yes. Family follow-on is a form of family reunification within the scope of the directive. The 9-month ceiling and the Dutch 3-month term both apply in the standard way.
Does Article 5(4) apply to EU-citizen families?
No. EU-citizen family files are under Directive 2004/38 (Free Movement), not 2003/86. The applicable term is 6 months for residence cards under Directive 2004/38.
What if the IND invokes the exceptional-circumstances exception?
The invocation must be in writing and reasoned. The applicant can challenge the reasoning before the district court. The CJEU sets a high bar; most routine reasons fail.
Does the Notice of Default invoke the EU directive?
Yes. Every family-reunification Notice we draft cites both Vw 25 (national term) and FRD 5(4) (EU ceiling). The dual citation signals procedural completeness and discourages an exceptional-circumstances claim without genuine grounds.
What if my procedure type is not family reunification?
Then Directive 2003/86 does not apply and the EU 9-month ceiling is not relevant. Other directives may apply (e.g. 2013/32 for asylum, 2009/50 for EU Blue Card).
Where can I read the original text?
EU Directive 2003/86 is at eur-lex.europa.eu. Article 5(4) is two short sub-paragraphs.
Related reading
for family reunificationawb 4 13 explainedNotice of Default (ingebrekestelling) immigrationechr article 8 family lifedutch embassy mvv decisions

Family-reunification application past nine months?

We cite both Vw 25 and EU FRD 5(4) in the Notice. The dual citation signals procedural completeness.

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