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No point in appealing, the refusal was correct. She needs to have earned £18,600 pa gross for the last six months, and it's a tick box requirement. No tick, no visa.boomish wrote:My daughter & her husband to be has just received a notice their fiance visa has been refused because of finances. Her income is complicated because she has been studying and receives monies as a combination of part of stipends, grants, tuition fee's and study pay from the church of England, however the total does come to 17k and as she doesn't pay tax on the grants this is all net income.
She will also graduate this year and has a full time job already on place that pays over the 18k requested figure and comes with accommodation.
I can only presume they think her pay is not net so have refused it, has anyone got any advice before we appeal? I'm not sure who we can go to to check the figures & we can't afford a lawyer.
I'd really appreciate any advice , this is so upsetting. They are an honest hard working couple that just want to get married.
Like I said, the requirement is £18,600 pa (£1550 per month) gross for the last six months.boomish wrote:Many thanks for the replies..none of the income was loans, they are stipends and counted as income, this is an equivalent tax free net income of 17k .
The UK government form FM 1.7 shows the £18600 Gross level of financial requirement is equivalent to £15,800, so her gross earnings would be a lot more than that. Or am I getting this wrong? from the example they show on the form it seems the same, as she doesn't pay tax we don't know the gross income amount.
OP said 'husband to be'Wanderer wrote:Incidentally, you say 'husband' and also 'fiancé' - are they married or not?
There may be a problem with applying for a Tier 5 YMS visa following the recent fiance visa refusal. Frontier Mole recently advised in another thread:CR001 wrote:Does he by any chance have a UK born grandparent?
How old is he? If he is young enough, why doesn't he apply for a Tier 5 YMS visa?
Thanks again for the quick reply, I put "husband to be" meaning future husband , sorry for the confusion.Wanderer wrote:Like I said, the requirement is £18,600 pa (£1550 per month) gross for the last six months.boomish wrote:Many thanks for the replies..none of the income was loans, they are stipends and counted as income, this is an equivalent tax free net income of 17k .
The UK government form FM 1.7 shows the £18600 Gross level of financial requirement is equivalent to £15,800, so her gross earnings would be a lot more than that. Or am I getting this wrong? from the example they show on the form it seems the same, as she doesn't pay tax we don't know the gross income amount.
On assessing the application the caseworker has no leeway to use his own judgement, it's tick or no tick I'm afraid. You can argue the fairness/unfairness of it all but them the rules.
Incidentally, you say 'husband' and also 'fiancé' - are they married or not?
Ancestry would not be a problem though so might be worthwhile if the fiance has UK born grandparent(s). Maybe fiance was on YMS already or didn't think to do this rather than settlement fiance visa.Casa wrote:There may be a problem with applying for a Tier 5 YMS visa following the recent fiance visa refusal. Frontier Mole recently advised in another thread:CR001 wrote:Does he by any chance have a UK born grandparent?
How old is he? If he is young enough, why doesn't he apply for a Tier 5 YMS visa?
Any mention of marriage at T5 YMS application would equal a refusal.
If you contemplate T5 be very very careful about your intent. If it is clearly to remain in the UK and is a route to enter to then get married; then the intent question gets raised and the credibility of your application gets hammered.
He would have done better doing YMS. That might not be possible now after a refused fiance visa.boomish wrote:Thanks for the reply CR001 & Casa, I think they looked at the tier 5 YMS, his great grandma was UK so thats 1 generation too far?
Damn, missed that!!CR001 wrote:OP said 'husband to be'Wanderer wrote:Incidentally, you say 'husband' and also 'fiancé' - are they married or not?
Oh gosh really? I'll look that up now, thanks for the advice, I phoned UK VISA advice but they could only advise us to write a letter asking why it was refused based on her net income. I also spoke to an accountant who said there isn't enough detail why it was refused but maybe it's because it says non-employment income.CR001 wrote:He would have done better doing YMS. That might not be possible now after a refused fiance visa.boomish wrote:Thanks for the reply CR001 & Casa, I think they looked at the tier 5 YMS, his great grandma was UK so thats 1 generation too far?
Does your daughter have any savings?
I think you can only have had one YMS visa in a lifetime....boomish wrote:Oh gosh really? I'll look that up now, thanks for the advice, I phoned UK VISA advice but they could only advise us to write a letter asking why it was refused based on her net income. I also spoke to an accountant who said there isn't enough detail why it was refused but maybe it's because it says non-employment income.CR001 wrote:He would have done better doing YMS. That might not be possible now after a refused fiance visa.boomish wrote:Thanks for the reply CR001 & Casa, I think they looked at the tier 5 YMS, his great grandma was UK so thats 1 generation too far?
Does your daughter have any savings?
Thanks again for the advice CR001
Edit I just spoke to him and he did already stay in UK on a YMS from 2012 to 2014 (its how they met) but does that help in anyway?
ahh yes and we can't really change it now, I was just thinking of ideas as her amount is so close, I can't find anything on the net about the visa net threshold income.CR001 wrote:Third party sponsorship does not count.
Any 'gifted' money would have to have a paper trail and would be counted as savings, which need to be held in an accessible account for at least 6 months.
Please be advised the refusal was correct in law, an immigration lawyer (and to be honest the folks on here are infinitely better advisors than most immigration lawyers or advisors, who'll just look it up on the internet) so an appeal is a waste of time IMHO.boomish wrote:I don't think so, besides we have paid all the money for this application now. Unless anyone here has any knowledge/experience of the net threshold requirement I can only think we need to hire an immigration lawyer for advice, I'd like to check her qualification maths are correct before we appeal.
But exactly how is it correct in law? as I stated earlier her net income exceeds their stated tax free income requirement, as our accountant said if we averaged her gross figure it would be beyond 22k. Its not clear if they want they will accept the gross figure or the net figure, they both meet the requirement in FM 1.7 appendix.Wanderer wrote:Please be advised the refusal was correct in law, an immigration lawyer (and to be honest the folks on here are infinitely better advisors than most immigration lawyers or advisors, who'll just look it up on the internet) so an appeal is a waste of time IMHO.boomish wrote:I don't think so, besides we have paid all the money for this application now. Unless anyone here has any knowledge/experience of the net threshold requirement I can only think we need to hire an immigration lawyer for advice, I'd like to check her qualification maths are correct before we appeal.
Plus an appeal will drag on for ages, why not wait until she meets the financial requirements?
BTW, what is the husbands visa status at the moment? Is he in the UK even?
Because immigration law requires the spouses income to be £18,600 pa gross, there is not provision for net to gross rounding up - that's the rule. By all means appeal, and I wish you luck, really I do, but read the forum, people are being refused ILR for assorts of reasons even for amounts as low as £150 discrepancy in tax.boomish wrote:But exactly how is it correct in law? as I stated earlier her net income exceeds their stated tax free income requirement, as our accountant said if we averaged her gross figure it would be beyond 22k. Its not clear if they want he gross figure or the net figure, they show both meet the requirement.Wanderer wrote:Please be advised the refusal was correct in law, an immigration lawyer (and to be honest the folks on here are infinitely better advisors than most immigration lawyers or advisors, who'll just look it up on the internet) so an appeal is a waste of time IMHO.boomish wrote:I don't think so, besides we have paid all the money for this application now. Unless anyone here has any knowledge/experience of the net threshold requirement I can only think we need to hire an immigration lawyer for advice, I'd like to check her qualification maths are correct before we appeal.
Plus an appeal will drag on for ages, why not wait until she meets the financial requirements?
BTW, what is the husbands visa status at the moment? Is he in the UK even?
I cannot see why an appeal is a waste of time unless you know why the net income is incorrect? I'd appreciate if you could explain why your stating this?