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You can get WP for five years, HSMP or student visa.goober wrote:Greetings all
I've noticed that to become a British citizen or permanent resident you need to have resided in the UK for about 5 years.
When looking at various working permits for the UK, 12 months seems to be the maximum you can stay. My question is, how can you stay in the UK for 5 years without citizenship or permanent residency or even family over there?
Many thanks for your assistance
Goober
Information you have is wrong mate, Infact ive hardly seen Work Permit for 12 months its mostly and usualy issued for 5 yearsgoober wrote:Greetings all
I've noticed that to become a British citizen or permanent resident you need to have resided in the UK for about 5 years.
When looking at various working permits for the UK, 12 months seems to be the maximum you can stay. My question is, how can you stay in the UK for 5 years without citizenship or permanent residency or even family over there?
Many thanks for your assistance
Goober
There's been so much press here recently about how desperate Australia is for plumbers and how they're actively trying to encourage foreign plumbers INTO Australia. Just today, one of my co-workers was saying he was considering training to be a plumber and moving to Australia, as apparently they get paid far far better there.goober wrote:Thanks for replying Admin, here are the answers.
What country are you coming from? &, which country are you a national of? Australia
Victoria, I think you are wrong here. You can't work for more than a year in total, whether that is part-time or full-time. The relevant part of the Immigration Rules states:VictoriaS wrote:You might want to try for the Working Holidaymaker visa, which is a two year visa which entitles you to work for 50 per cent of the time (part time for the duration or full time for 1 year).
I know that, I was being polite (-:IMMIGRATION LAWYER wrote:Definately wrong. Since February 2005 work must be incidental to holidays.
Presumably meaning naturalise as Irish, not British, although I'm not sure that "naturalise" is the correct term, is it? And of course Americans aren't given any sort of privileged access here!VictoriaS wrote:Erm....?Administrator wrote:.
An American with Irish grandparents can naturalize, for example...
Victoria
Indeed, exactly.yankeegirl wrote:I'm thinking the Admin meant that they can acquire IRISH citizenship with Irish grandparents, and then thus move freely to the UK. At least, that's how I read it anyways lol.