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Keep in mind we can't access the form and don't know what answers you have previously given, so might not be able to provide an explanation. If you answered anywhere on the form that your sponsor was employed, it may think you are trying to include employment income either from the UK or overseas as employment income can be combined with cash savings to meet the financial requirement. If this is the case, I suspect you could either answer the questions or just say your sponsor isn't employed; saying your sponsor isn't employed may make the application easier to fill out and their employment status is irrelevant anyway if you are relying on cash savings alone.Mfamily wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 4:16 pmBut when i complete financial page by clicking on cash savings route then in the end of this one question they ask i don't know why they ask this question
''Does(my partner my sponser) have a confirmed offer of employment in the UK starting within 3 months of their return?''
And also i didn't see anywhere in the form category D as i know category D is cash savings
Thanks geoeng need explanation
I'm relying on cash saving route i didn't mention anywhere in application form that my sponser is a employee but only here in the last this question cominggeoeng wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 5:10 pmKeep in mind we can't access the form and don't know what answers you have previously given, so might not be able to provide an explanation. If you answered anywhere on the form that your sponsor was employed, it may think you are trying to include employment income either from the UK or overseas as employment income can be combined with cash savings to meet the financial requirement. If this is the case, I suspect you could either answer the questions or just say your sponsor isn't employed; saying your sponsor isn't employed may make the application easier to fill out and their employment status is irrelevant anyway if you are relying on cash savings alone.Mfamily wrote: ↑Tue Oct 15, 2019 4:16 pmBut when i complete financial page by clicking on cash savings route then in the end of this one question they ask i don't know why they ask this question
''Does(my partner my sponser) have a confirmed offer of employment in the UK starting within 3 months of their return?''
And also i didn't see anywhere in the form category D as i know category D is cash savings
Thanks geoeng need explanation
Fair enough. Since it doesn't matter anyway, I'd just answer no and move on. If you answer yes then they'll be looking for supporting evidence that will just confuse the situation.
They aren't intended to be trick questions. Just answer them honestly. If you are unsure of which answer to select because of a complicated situation, pick one answer and explain the situation in a cover letter. You are required to prove the following and this is what the questions are intended to do: you must have met your partner in person, you must have a genuine and subsisting relationship, you must be in a valid marriage (or equivalent partnership), you must intend to live together in the UK. If you provide sufficient evidence to satisfy those criteria then you should be fine. If you are married, you are not required to have lived together previously so the answer to that specific question is rather irrelevant except that it helps prove a genuine and subsisting relationship; in your case, you can prove this by providing evidence of time spent together and of conversations when you were apart.
The different interbank percentages are provided so people can account for fees that banks and currency converters would charge for actually converting their currency when they are buying and selling. It is the 0% rate that is the actual exchange rate as no currency is actually being converted.Mfamily wrote: ↑Tue Oct 29, 2019 2:53 amNeed an expert opinion...
I'm using oanda.com for currency conversion but there is a option coming like INTERBANK +/- and there are options under that 0% 1% 4% and 5%
Will the ECO will convert the currency with 0% or with any other options
I have pak rupees account and using cash saving route for spouse visa thanks
WITH name so HO can see it is your spouse and not a random person.
I think you need to keep in mind a couple of things.Mfamily wrote: ↑Sat Nov 02, 2019 8:45 pmWe are facing a problem before six month in my wife's uk account amount was 13000 and in our joint account in Pakistan before six month amount was hardly 49500£ after
Conversion but before two month in my wife's UK account amount was 12724£ and that same date time in our Pakistani account amount was 52000£.
My Situation is like this after converting second pak rupees account into poundsgeoeng wrote: ↑Wed Nov 06, 2019 8:24 amI think you need to keep in mind a couple of things.Mfamily wrote: ↑Sat Nov 02, 2019 8:45 pmWe are facing a problem before six month in my wife's uk account amount was 13000 and in our joint account in Pakistan before six month amount was hardly 49500£ after
Conversion but before two month in my wife's UK account amount was 12724£ and that same date time in our Pakistani account amount was 52000£.
1 - You can only use cash savings you have held for at least 6 months prior to the date of application. Any amount of these funds not held for 6 months likely would not be considered. This includes any income into that savings account in the previous 6 months. It also means you should probably be using the lowest UK account amount (£12,724) as you have not held the whole £13,000 for 6 months.
2 - You should only be converting one PKR value to £, not converting each month. Whatever amount of PKR you have held for at least 6 months prior to applying should be converted to £ using the exchange rate on the date of applying and this amount in £ should be used towards meeting the financial requirement. That is my understanding anyway, others with more experience in the cash savings route might correct this. Hopefully it helps in figuring out which amounts to put.
I think you would have to put £12,724 for the first account, I can't imagine you would be able to put an amount higher than is currently in the account.Mfamily wrote: ↑Wed Nov 06, 2019 9:46 pmIf i put lowest amount of first account and lowest account of second account of last six month then I'm less than 62500
They asked amount of both account seperately in the application form
You can see in the month of September when my first account amount is 12724 in the meanwhile amount of my other account is higher
Thanks for helping
Second accounts amount is increasing because my property rent and other profits comes in every monthgeoeng wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2019 8:25 amI think you would have to put £12,724 for the first account, I can't imagine you would be able to put an amount higher than is currently in the account.Mfamily wrote: ↑Wed Nov 06, 2019 9:46 pmIf i put lowest amount of first account and lowest account of second account of last six month then I'm less than 62500
They asked amount of both account seperately in the application form
You can see in the month of September when my first account amount is 12724 in the meanwhile amount of my other account is higher
Thanks for helping
For the second account, I don't understand why the amount is increasing or why you are converting pak rupees into pounds each month, I don't think you should be doing that as the only conversion to pounds that matters is the one on the date of application. If the conversion of the value of the pak rupees account to pounds on the date of application meets the requirement when added to the first account, and that exact amount of pak rupees has been held for at least 6 months prior to applying, then the requirement would be met. You shouldn't be taking the lowest amount of the second account in pounds in the past 6 months and adding it to the first account, you should be taking the lowest amount of pak rupees in the past 6 months and converting it to pounds before adding it to the first account to see if the requirement is met. That is my understanding anyway. If the conversion into pounds of the lowest amount of pak rupees held for at least 6 months is £49,500 then you wouldn't meet the financial requirement with cash savings alone at this time.
"the level of cash savings relied upon in the application has been held in an account(s) in the name of the person or of the person and their partner jointly throughout the period of 6 months prior to the date of application."
They will use only the amount held for at least 6 months. Convert it to pounds. Add it to the amount in your other account.
RIght. It seems the application is asking for the account amounts separately. You will be providing bank statements showing the account amounts separately. Read into that what you will. I do not know how UKVI will interpret this, I can only state what is in the rules and guidance and how I would interpret that, which I have done.
Tb certificate needs to be valid on the date of submission of applicationMfamily wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2020 9:08 pmHello how're you all
I didn't apply due to some reason now I'm going to apply but want to ask a question
My tb certificate expiring on 28th February. Tb certificate needs to be valid on the date of submission of application or needs to be valid on the date when you scan documents thanks
The expiry date on the TB test is enough evidence. If it's expired, it's no longer valid. See the Government guidance: it states the test is valid for 6 months. https://www.gov.uk/tb-test-visa