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Thank you noajthan for your response. And how can I get P45 and P60 as I have not got them with me (This part-time work was in 2009) ? will payslips be sufficient?noajthan wrote:1) Yes
2) Yes
3) It will all be crosschecked and verified with HMRC (& other agencies) as part of good character checks and immigration compliance checks.
Clearly anyone on an immigration journey who doesn't keep such vital documents puts themselves at a disadvantage.Ahmedali29 wrote:Thank you noajthan for your response. And how can I get P45 and P60 as I have not got them with me (This part-time work was in 2009) ? will payslips be sufficient?
Can I please just clarify the reason P45/P60 is necessary.noajthan wrote: Maybe employer can provide copies.
Otherwise payslips will have to do.
The user is this post is on ILR through the UK immigration rule route. The requirements are slightly different to what you would need as an EU citizen.Linaco wrote:Can I please just clarify the reason P45/P60 is necessary.noajthan wrote: Maybe employer can provide copies.
Otherwise payslips will have to do.
In section 3 the documents required are: passport or Letters from employers, educational establishments or other Government Departments indicating presence in UK. So if I provide the passport that should be enough, right? Or is there another section where these are compulsory?
I am asking because I am missing one P60 and one P45 from the same company. At the time I did not even know what P60 was, and a few months later the company went into administration, so I did not get my P45 either. Thank you
A non-EU citizen only has to prove residence with their passport as their passports are stamped when entering the UK. For EU citizens, there are other options to prove residence that must be submitted.Linaco wrote:Apologies. I came across this topic and wanted to clarify my understanding.
Thank you all for your input. I have been able only to get p45 from my recent two employers but only got payslips from my first employer. Would that be okay, please?CR001 wrote:A non-EU citizen only has to prove residence with their passport as their passports are stamped when entering the UK. For EU citizens, there are other options to prove residence that must be submitted.Linaco wrote:Apologies. I came across this topic and wanted to clarify my understanding.
Best to continue in your topic if you have one or start your own to avoid confusion.
This was my experience as well. I went also through the NCS and they never asked for any documents relating to my past employment.Zhonor wrote:I submitted my application without any P60s or P45s as a non EU applicant. I think non-EU passport would be sufficient. I was working for the past 10 years as well (floating between part time and full time) but my NCS agent never asked me for any of those HMRC documents.
Thanks Zhonor for your reply. What documents you have exactly submitted and has your application been approved yet? If not when have u submitted it?Zhonor wrote:I submitted my application without any P60s or P45s as a non EU applicant. I think non-EU passport would be sufficient. I was working for the past 10 years as well (floating between part time and full time) but my NCS agent never asked me for any of those HMRC documents.
I applied approx end of Feb 2017 and submitted the following:-Ahmedali29 wrote:Thanks Zhonor for your reply. What documents you have exactly submitted and has your application been approved yet? If not when have u submitted it?Zhonor wrote:I submitted my application without any P60s or P45s as a non EU applicant. I think non-EU passport would be sufficient. I was working for the past 10 years as well (floating between part time and full time) but my NCS agent never asked me for any of those HMRC documents.
Thanks Tea-Rcekt for your full explanation. I much appreciate it. So do you think I just take with me the only documents that I have (e.g. P45 from last two employers and payslips that I have from the first employer), would that be okay? or I just ignore these documengts and write employment history?Tea_Rocket wrote:This was my experience as well. I went also through the NCS and they never asked for any documents relating to my past employment.Zhonor wrote:I submitted my application without any P60s or P45s as a non EU applicant. I think non-EU passport would be sufficient. I was working for the past 10 years as well (floating between part time and full time) but my NCS agent never asked me for any of those HMRC documents.
I've mentioned in another thread that I think these employment documents are more important for EEA nationals than they are for those of us who aren't. EEA nationals have to prove that they have been physically present in the UK during their qualifying period while the rest of us have stamps in our passports that prove this. Given that the OP was on student visas covering a 10 year ILR qualifying period, I think it's probably safe to assume that s/he is not an EEA citizen and that the Home Office will be able to establish her/his physical presence in the UK through passport stamps. I also doubt that they will have any problems checking the OP's national insurance contributions with HMRC, so long as the OP provides her/his national insurance number, and the details of employment that are asked for on the form.
OP, if you're really concerned, HMRC can issue you a letter confirming your employment history and national insurance contributions. I strongly suspect that behind the scenes, the Home Office request a similar document when they're verifying the information in an application. I doubt that it's necessary for you to have this document, but if you'd feel better having it, then it's there.
Are you applying through an NCS? If so, I would take any documents that might be relevant to your application with you, but if your experience is anything like mine, they won't look at them, much less send them along with your application. Somewhere in the giant folder of documents I brought with me to my appointment were P45s and payslips (as well as my birth certificate, my spouse's birth certificate, various degree certificates, and a whole host of other documents that were ultimately not sent along with my application), but the caseworker never asked for them.Ahmedali29 wrote:Thanks Tea-Rcekt for your full explanation. I much appreciate it. So do you think I just take with me the only documents that I have (e.g. P45 from last two employers and payslips that I have from the first employer), would that be okay? or I just ignore these documengts and write employment history?
Thank you Tea_Rocket for your reply and advice. I will apply using NCS, so I will go with your first point. Do you know how long does it take to get employment history from HMRC if I apply for it?Tea_Rocket wrote:Are you applying through an NCS? If so, I would take any documents that might be relevant to your application with you, but if your experience is anything like mine, they won't look at them, much less send them along with your application. Somewhere in the giant folder of documents I brought with me to my appointment were P45s and payslips (as well as my birth certificate, my spouse's birth certificate, various degree certificates, and a whole host of other documents that were ultimately not sent along with my application), but the caseworker never asked for them.Ahmedali29 wrote:Thanks Tea-Rcekt for your full explanation. I much appreciate it. So do you think I just take with me the only documents that I have (e.g. P45 from last two employers and payslips that I have from the first employer), would that be okay? or I just ignore these documengts and write employment history?
If you're applying by post, then I think it's worth it to send as many supplementary documents as you can. The caseworkers at the Home Office can always set these aside if they're not needed, but if they have to contact you for more information, then that inevitably slows your application process down.
I'm afraid I don't know. However, if you aren't applying for naturalisation for a couple of months, then I imagine the employment history from HMRC will arrive in plenty of time if you request it straight away.Ahmedali29 wrote:Thank you Tea_Rocket for your reply and advice. I will apply using NCS, so I will go with your first point. Do you know how long does it take to get employment history from HMRC if I apply for it?
Thank you Tea_Rocket and Astonished for your reply. By the way, do they give you the exact start and end dates of your jobs as a part of employment history or just the year?astonished wrote:From memory, it took HMRC around 4-6 weeks to provide the employment history.
Exact start/end dates.Ahmedali29 wrote:Thank you Tea_Rocket and Astonished for your reply. By the way, do they give you the exact start and end dates of your jobs as a part of employment history or just the year?astonished wrote:From memory, it took HMRC around 4-6 weeks to provide the employment history.
thank you.
Hello,salmintin wrote:Exact start/end dates.Ahmedali29 wrote:Thank you Tea_Rocket and Astonished for your reply. By the way, do they give you the exact start and end dates of your jobs as a part of employment history or just the year?astonished wrote:From memory, it took HMRC around 4-6 weeks to provide the employment history.
thank you.
Hello noajthan,noajthan wrote:Clearly anyone on an immigration journey who doesn't keep such vital documents puts themselves at a disadvantage.Ahmedali29 wrote:Thank you noajthan for your response. And how can I get P45 and P60 as I have not got them with me (This part-time work was in 2009) ? will payslips be sufficient?
Maybe employer can provide copies.
Otherwise payslips will have to do.