The no-fault residence permit is a residence permit for foreign nationals who, through no fault of their own, cannot return to their country of origin or be re-admitted elsewhere. It is governed by paragraph B14/3 of the Vreemdelingencirculaire (Vc 2000) and is granted sparingly. The criteria are strict: the applicant must demonstrate that real efforts to return have been made and have failed. The statutory decision term is the same as other regular permits under Vw 25: three months.
No-fault residence · the no-fault residence route under Vc B14/3
The no-fault residence permit is for foreign nationals in the Netherlands without lawful residence whose return is genuinely not possible despite their cooperation. Typical situations: the country of origin will not issue a travel document, no other country will accept the applicant, statelessness is unresolved, or the applicant is medically unfit to travel and the underlying condition cannot be treated in the country of origin.
All four must be met. The evidentiary bar is high. Most no-fault residence applications are refused on the first or second criterion.
The application is filed at the IND as a regular residence-permit request under Vw 25, with the no-fault residence grounds named in the cover letter. The IND consults with DT&V (the Repatriation and Departure Service) on the cooperation criterion. The statutory term under Vw 25 is three months. The same Awb 4:13 / 4:17 mechanics apply: if the IND does not decide within three months, the Notice of Default opens the 14-day window and the daily penalty (dwangsom) follows.
No-fault residence files are commonly delayed because the IND needs DT&V's input on cooperation, which can take many months. The statutory term in Vw 25 (3 months) still applies. The DT&V consultation does not formally suspend the clock unless the IND has invoked an Awb 4:5 request for missing information from the applicant. Most DT&V consultations are internal to the State and do not pause the clock.
When three months have passed, the Notice of Default opens the procedural route in the standard way. The IND's internal pressure to decide is significant in no-fault residence files because of the social and humanitarian profile.
No-fault residence files are a niche of our caseload. The substantive case is built by the applicant with NGO support (typically INLIA or Defence for Children). Our role is procedural: when three months have passed without a decision, we draft the Notice citing Vw 25, the Vc B14/3 paragraph, and Awb 4:17. The Notice itself does not argue the substantive case; it pushes for the decision so the substantive arguments can be made in objection or court appeal if the decision is refused.