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What was the reason for your husband's ILR application refusal? Why does he feel that ILR(LR) will succeed when the SET(O) application failed?BSatti wrote:Hi,
I applied for Tier 1 (dependent) extension in January 2016 after my husband's ILR application was held for further inquires in PEO appointment. (My visa expired in March 2016). Unfortunately in August 2016 my husband's ILR application was refused. My husband has then applied for SET (LR) on 10 years basis and he is also pursuing judicial review for his Tier 1- ILR application.
So far I didn't get any response for my application, however I am just worried that my application will also be rejected any time and I will lose right to work. I know I am just going by the luck for these past months.
Can I change my application to now SET(LR) dependent to retain 3C (right of work)? If I apply for SET (LR) dependent, will they refund the fee for my Tier 1 (dependent) application?
Can you please advise?
Thanks in advance.
Yes it is tax discrepancies and AR also rejected, see below linksCasa wrote:What was the reason for your husband's ILR application refusal? Why does he feel that ILR(LR) will succeed when the SET(O) application failed?
If your husband is granted ILR under long residence you will have to apply for a FLR(M) visa which will re-set your immigration clock to zero, putting you on a new 5 years route to settlement unless you qualify for 10 years long residence before then.
Edit: Beaten by a speedier CR001
Thanks a lot for your prompt response. Much appreciated.CR001 wrote:You need to vary your application to FLR(M) - there is no 'Set LR dependent visa' - if your husband got his ILR based on long residence. You are unable to continue as a PBS dependent in this case and once you switch, your clock towards ILR will be reset to zero.
You will have to pay the immigration health surcharge again. Not sure about the visa fee.
When did or does your husbands Tier 1 G expire?
Why was ILR refused for Tier 1 G route? Tax discrepancies and amendments? Waste of time doing an expensive JR if he has now got ILR based on long residence.
BSatti wrote:Thanks a lot for your prompt response. Much appreciated.
One question. If I vary my application to FLR (M), will i have right to work up til the decision is made ? Possibly. I am surprised you did not get a refusal of your Tier 1 Dependent visa. Have you had any communication from HO regarding your application?
and also my clock towards ILR won't be reset? Yes it will. If your husband gets ILR based on long residence then you have to switch to FLR(M) and it resets your clock. You lose the time spent on PBS Dependent for ILR based on 5 years residence but it will count if you reach 10 years long residence though. You will need 5 years on FLR(M) before you can apply for ILR with 5 years residence, you cannot combine the two different visa categories to make up 5 years. The rules changed for PBS dependent in April 2014 whose spouse's applied for ILR based on long residence.
My husband hasn't got decision on his SET (LR) application yet. As previously advised, if his ILR fails, FLR(M) will also fail.
CR001 wrote:BSatti wrote:Thanks a lot for your prompt response. Much appreciated.
One question. If I vary my application to FLR (M), will i have right to work up til the decision is made ? Possibly. I am surprised you did not get a refusal of your Tier 1 Dependent visa. Have you had any communication from HO regarding your application? No I haven't heard anything at all. No call, no letter. That's good as I can continue working.
and also my clock towards ILR won't be reset? Yes it will. If your husband gets ILR based on long residence then you have to switch to FLR(M) and it resets your clock. You lose the time spent on PBS Dependent for ILR based on 5 years residence but it will count if you reach 10 years long residence though. You will need 5 years on FLR(M) before you can apply for ILR with 5 years residence, you cannot combine the two different visa categories to make up 5 years. The rules changed for PBS dependent in April 2014 whose spouse's applied for ILR based on long residence. Can i apply for FLR (M) and then switch to Tier 2 (general) without leaving the country as my company is happy to sponsor me?
My husband hasn't got decision on his SET (LR) application yet. As previously advised, if his ILR fails, FLR(M) will also fail.
Casa wrote:What was the reason for your husband's ILR application refusal? Why does he feel that ILR(LR) will succeed when the SET(O) application failed? When the permission for judicial review was refused, the admin court also suggested us to apply for a new application with any supportive evidence, so we applied for SET (LR) application with some more evidence hoping that it will be accepted.BSatti wrote:Hi,
I applied for Tier 1 (dependent) extension in January 2016 after my husband's ILR application was held for further inquires in PEO appointment. (My visa expired in March 2016). Unfortunately in August 2016 my husband's ILR application was refused. My husband has then applied for SET (LR) on 10 years basis and he is also pursuing judicial review for his Tier 1- ILR application.
So far I didn't get any response for my application, however I am just worried that my application will also be rejected any time and I will lose right to work. I know I am just going by the luck for these past months.
Can I change my application to now SET(LR) dependent to retain 3C (right of work)? If I apply for SET (LR) dependent, will they refund the fee for my Tier 1 (dependent) application?
Can you please advise?
Thanks in advance.
If your husband is granted ILR under long residence you will have to apply for a FLR(M) visa which will re-set your immigration clock to zero, putting you on a new 5 years route to settlement unless you qualify for 10 years long residence before then.
Edit: Beaten by a speedier CR001
Thanks for this. Sorry, I am going round and round in circles just to figure out what is the best way out of very limited options we have.CR001 wrote:No you cannot apply for Tier 2 G within the UK regardless of which dependent visa you are on, as I have advised previously when you asked this question in the Tier 2 General sub-forum. You can only apply for Tier 2 G from your home country, which will also be a brand new 5 year residence period.
If hubby is successful with ILR and you get FLR(M), why would you want to move to the very restrictive Tier 2 General?