“…The freedom of mobility and the rights of settlement that EU migrants enjoy within the European market also point to why the status of intra‐European migrants had not attracted, until quite recently, significant scholarly interest in terms of exploration of belonging, integration, and identity in the field of migration studies: The term “migrant” did not seem to apply to EU migrants in an equal measure (from a legal perspective, they are European citizens rather than migrants in the sense that third country nationals in the EU are). The more visible studies of the link between intra‐EU migration and identities come from the field of European studies (e.g., Favell, ; Risse, ; Rother & Nebe, ) and focus on “mobility” rather than “migration.” Only very recently, special attention has been paid to the modalities of integration of EU nationals in the UK (Grzymala‐Kazlowska & Phillimore, ; McGhee, Moreh, & Vlachantoni, ; Ryan, ). Nevertheless, the dynamics of belonging, central in shaping EU nationals' experiences, attitudes, and behaviour in the trajectories of their migrations, deserves exploration in its own right.…”