Brexit: Call for Belgian authorities to address multiple status for M-card holders

As part of our pro bono support to “Brexit and the Belgian Brits” (BABBs) community group, we have addressed a formal request to the Belgian authorities – as well as the European Commission – to draw attention to a serious but fixable administrative gap affecting British citizens living in Belgium.

The context: rights that should last a lifetime

Under the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement, British citizens who were already lawfully resident in Belgium before 31 December 2020 retain a comprehensive set of rights, including the right to live and work in Belgium, the right to equal treatment, family reunification rights, and the right to return after periods of absence. These are not temporary concessions – they are permanent, Treaty-level protections.

The Belgian M card is the document that currently attests to this status. For most holders, it works perfectly well. The problem arises when the M card holder’s life moves on, such as when they acquire Belgian nationality or when they obtain a second, complementary immigration status, such as EU long-term residence status or residence as the family member of an EU citizen.

Acquiring Belgian citizenship or an additional residence status should not erase the very rights the Withdrawal Agreement was designed to protect.

The problems we have identified

1. Belgium does not allow holding two residence cards simultaneously

When a beneficiary of the Withdrawal Agreement qualifies for and obtains an additional immigration status (for example, an “F card” as the family member of an EU citizen, or an “L card” as a long-term resident), the Belgian authorities currently require them to surrender their “M card”. However, the European Commission has explicitly confirmed in its guidance that holding multiple immigration statuses also entails the possibility of holding multiple residence documents. Belgian practice is therefore out of step with EU law on this point.

2. British citizens who acquire Belgian nationality must give up their M card

Belgian law treats a person who acquires Belgian nationality as, first and foremost, Belgian. This is uncontroversial. What is problematic is that, once they hand in their M card, there is currently no failsafe mechanism on the Belgian population register to record that this person also holds Withdrawal Agreement beneficiary status. The Court of Justice of the EU confirmed in its Lounes judgment (Case C-165/16) that acquiring the nationality of a host state does not extinguish EU free movement rights. The same principle applies to citizens’ rights under the Withdrawal Agreement and yet the Belgian system currently provides no secure and long-lasting way to record or demonstrate this.

3. The Population Register has no clear codes confirming the Status of Withdrawal Agreement beneficiarY

The M card is currently the only document that proves Withdrawal Agreement beneficiary status in dealings with federal, regional, and municipal authorities. The Belgian national register‘s existing information type system (so-called IT/TI codes) does not include a specific code that records whether a person holds permanent or temporary residence rights under the Withdrawal Agreement, independently of their current nationality or any additional immigration status. Once the M card is gone, that proof often disappears with it.

Why does this matter in practice? Withdrawal Agreement beneficiaries have specific rights that sometimes differ from general EU law rights. The most notable is the right to return to Belgium even after an absence of up to five years. A British beneficiary of the Withdrawal Agreement who has attained permanent residence in Belgium who then obtains a long-term residence permit in Belgium that enables them to move to France might find it practically impossible to return to Belgium and resume their residence there.
The same applies to family reunification rights under the Agreement, which are more favourable in many respects than those under Belgian immigration law. Someone who has become Belgian but retains their British nationality may face serious difficulties invoking their right under the Withdrawal Agreement if there is no record of their previous beneficiary status.

The solutions we have proposed

Rather than simply raising the problem, our letter sets out concrete, technically feasible proposals that can work within Belgium’s existing population register infrastructure. These require no change to legislation and no new systems need to be built. The solutions require updated instructions and targeted additions to existing coding frameworks.

Solution 1 — Recording dual nationality without restriction

The Belgian Population Register already has a code for dual nationality (IT/TI code 032). However, its current instructions limit its use to persons who voluntarily acquire an additional nationality on top of Belgian nationality and only from 2008 onwards. We propose that this code be applied universally: for anyone who holds Belgian nationality alongside another nationality, regardless of when or how either was acquired. This would allow British-Belgian dual nationals to have both their nationalities properly recorded, making their status visible to Belgian authorities at all levels.

Solution 2 — A dedicated register code for Withdrawal Agreement status

The Register already allows the recording of special information about non-Belgian nationals (IT/TI code 202). We propose the creation of a new sub-category — code 5.3.0 — specifically for British nationals who are Withdrawal Agreement beneficiaries. This new heading would carry four sub-codes distinguishing between temporary and permanent residence rights, and between principal beneficiaries and family members. With this in place, a person’s Withdrawal Agreement status would be permanently recorded on the register, surviving any change of nationality or the acquisition of a different residence status.


What this means for British citizens in Belgium

If you are a British national living in Belgium and you are considering applying for Belgian nationality, or you believe you may qualify for EU long-term resident status or another immigration status, you should be aware of these issues before you take action. Surrendering your M card without a proper record of your Withdrawal Agreement status being preserved elsewhere may result in practical difficulties in proving your rights to Belgian authorities in the future.

We are actively engaging with the Belgian authorities on this and will publish any developments on this page. We believe the proposed solutions are straightforward to implement and we are cautiously optimistic that the authorities will act on them.

In the meantime, if you are considering a change to your residence status or applying for Belgian nationality, we would be happy to advise you on the implications that your plans may have on your current and what action you can take to safeguard your status even without these technical changes taking place.

Please free to get in touch

We regularly advise British citizens on their rights under the Withdrawal Agreement, as well as providing advice to all residents of Belgium on acquiring Belgian nationality. If you have questions about how these issues might affect you personally, please feel free to get in touch.

Get in touch

This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Published May 2026.

Brexit: Call for Belgian authorities to respect appeals rights under Withdrawal Agreement

How the Belgian Immigration Office is harming NATO’s cybersecurity capabilities

Today, our firm is calling on the Belgian authorities to respect the Withdrawal Agreement and put an end to the practice of the Immigration Office to withdraw temporary protection to British citizens who are in the process of appealing a refusal to grant them a right of residence in Belgium.

Under the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement British citizens who bring an appeal against a refusal to award them a residence permit are allowed to continue living in the country concerned until a final judgment has been handed down.

Article 18(3) of the Withdrawal Agreement could not be more crystal-clear: “pending a final judgment handed down in case of judicial redress sought against any rejection of such application by the competent administrative authorities, all rights provided for in this Part shall be deemed to apply to the applicant”, which include the right to remain and work until the appeal is finally concluded.

Despite this clear obligation, the Belgian authorities have nonetheless been withdrawing the temporary residence document (so-called annexe 35 / bijlage 35) which had been issued to British citizens when they first brought an appeal, in circumstances where their first-level appeal is refused by the Immigration Appeals Council and they subsequently bring a second-level appeal before the Council of State, the Belgian supreme administrative court.

When our firm challenged the Belgian Immigration Office over this, we were informed that, as a matter of Belgian law, appeals to the Council of State do not have any suspensive effect. While this may be correct as a matter of Belgian law, we have pointed that the Withdrawal Agreement explicitly provides otherwise and that this overrides any contrary provision of national law in accordance with the principle of supremacy of EU law.

Our view is fully supported by the European Commission’s guidance note on citizens’ rights under the Withdrawal Agreement (para. 2.6.16) and its FAQs on the rights of UK nationals under the Withdrawal Agreement (Qs 6.4, 7.9 and 7.18).

The Belgian Immigration Office has so far refused to accept this view, saying that their obligation is to provide a first-level right of appeal but nothing further, and that as a consequence their obligation to provide for the suspensive effect of appeals under the Withdrawal Agreement has been extinguished with the dismissal of the first-level appeal.

Given that this practice is predominantly affecting British contractors supporting NATO’s communications agency, this is having a significant detrimental impact on the day-to-day operations of NATO’s IT infrastructure and cybersecurity. These actions also pose a risk to the financial viability of scores of British businesses which act as subcontractors under framework contracts concluded by that agency.

The Belgian authorities must step up and honour their commitments under the Withdrawal Agreement.  What is needed right now, as a short-term fix, is for the Belgian Immigration Office to halt issuing instructions for the cancellation of temporary authorisations (annex 35) and re-instate those which have been cancelled. As a longer-term solution, legislation needs to be tabled to address these gaps in procedural safeguards contained in the Belgian decree on immigration.

Our firm has therefore today addressed letters to the Belgian and British authorities asking for this situation to be resolved as a matter of urgency.

If you are affected by any of these matters, please feel free to contact our firm in full confidence.