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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
Thanks zimba for your valuable information. My 1st baby got British Passport on the basis of father had ILR before his birth.Zimba wrote: ↑Wed Nov 03, 2021 12:13 pmThe fact that you are British is not relevant. She should extend under PBS dependant before leaving the UK in 2022. There is no maintenance requirement for her. Then she can leave the UK with a valid visa and return without any issues. Remember she is subject to 180 days max absence limits if she wants to go for ILR later. Baby boy will follow her mother's immigration path if he was born outside the UK and you were not British at the time of his birth.
Your newborn child will be born to a British father meaning such a child is British at birth. I suggest applying for a certificate of entitlement to the right of abode for the baby rather than a British passport as it may be much faster.
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... de_ROA.pdf
You can apply for an extension for your wife at any time. However, I suggest applying early next year.People who are British citizens or who have right of abode
A person who is a British citizen, or who has right of abode in the UK cannot be
given permission to enter or stay under the Immigration Rules. This is because
under section 1(1) of the Immigration Act 1971 a person with right of abode is not
subject to immigration control.
If a person who has right of abode applies for a visit visa and you are satisfied that
they have right of abode, you should advise them that their application cannot be
considered, the application will be withdrawn, and they may want to apply for a
certificate of entitlement to right of abode or a British passport instead. The
application fee will not be refunded.
Thanks Zimba a lot for piece of mind.Zimba wrote: ↑Thu Nov 04, 2021 1:55 amApplying for COE is much faster than applying for the first British passport from outside the UK. This is the gist of my advice.
British citizens are NOT subject to immigration control and so as your baby will be British, UKVI will very likely refuse any visa application for him:
You can apply for an extension for your wife at any time. However, I suggest applying early next year.People who are British citizens or who have right of abode
A person who is a British citizen, or who has right of abode in the UK cannot be
given permission to enter or stay under the Immigration Rules. This is because
under section 1(1) of the Immigration Act 1971 a person with right of abode is not
subject to immigration control.
If a person who has right of abode applies for a visit visa and you are satisfied that
they have right of abode, you should advise them that their application cannot be
considered, the application will be withdrawn, and they may want to apply for a
certificate of entitlement to right of abode or a British passport instead. The
application fee will not be refunded.
You being on universal credit should have no effect on her application.
Incorrect here. Coe expires with the passport and would have to be applied for again with a new passport. COE is only ever valid for the length of the passport validity.Zimba wrote: ↑Fri Nov 05, 2021 9:54 amCOE is the name of the sticker which is proof of someone's right of abode in the UK. This is issued just for the purpose of entry to the UK for people without a British passport and endorsed in a non-British passport. COE has no expiry and will be valid even in an expired passport. I repeat again that British citizens are NOT subject to immigration controls and so if you show up at the border and can prove in any way that you are a citizen, you will be admitted without any issues
If you apply for a British passport, the home office will cancel the COE sticker
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... de_ROA.pdfA certificate of entitlement to the right of abode will cease to be valid on the date the passport or travel document to which it is attached expires. If you wish to have a certificate of entitlement placed in your new passport you will need to make a fresh application.
Zimba wrote: ↑Thu Nov 04, 2021 1:55 amApplying for COE is much faster than applying for the first British passport from outside the UK. This is the gist of my advice.
British citizens are NOT subject to immigration control and so as your baby will be British, UKVI will very likely refuse any visa application for him:
You can apply for an extension for your wife at any time. However, I suggest applying early next year.People who are British citizens or who have right of abode
A person who is a British citizen, or who has right of abode in the UK cannot be
given permission to enter or stay under the Immigration Rules. This is because
under section 1(1) of the Immigration Act 1971 a person with right of abode is not
subject to immigration control.
If a person who has right of abode applies for a visit visa and you are satisfied that
they have right of abode, you should advise them that their application cannot be
considered, the application will be withdrawn, and they may want to apply for a
certificate of entitlement to right of abode or a British passport instead. The
application fee will not be refunded.
You being on universal credit should have no effect on her application.
These are all fine. You don't need all of them. Just pick one or two dated every three months or so.Mak9878 wrote: ↑Sat Jul 02, 2022 4:58 pmThanks admin for unlocking thread.
Hi seniors, juniors and gurs,
Hope you all guys are doing well.
My wife is case already explained above. Basically she is short of 7+ months to complete 5 years on PBS Tier 1 Entrepreneur route to be eligible for ILR.
Her visa is expiring in the end of October 2022 and I am preparing her application from today.
I think, I can apply anytime before visa expiry on PBS route with fees and 3 years nhs cost. And there is no requirement for maintenance fund as well. Hope I am correct.
I am just confused with her proof of address or bills to prove she lives with me. I have following documents in that regard for her only, will these help?
1) Bank statement current account
2) bank statement credit card
3) Mobile bills
4)NHS and medical letters from GP
5) Council Voting and council letters
6) NI letter
7) Dvla provisional
her employer letters and payslips
9) HMRc letters regarding Maternity allowance and sick pays
10) Marriage certificate
In case of mine documents, i have same documents as well with extra one documents i.e. " Tenancy agreement" on my name only.
Could u please help on the documents mentioned above and how much and how many with gap or without gap need to be scanned for application.
Thanks
Yes, no need for messenger/whatsapp communication.Mak9878 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 03, 2022 3:20 pmThanks Marcnath for your prompt reply.
Is there need to include messenger or whatsapp communications screenshot? I belive thats for the first time entry clearance from outside uk?
So I should show her and mine cohabitation documents from last granted visa/leave to remain?
Am i correct?
Thanks?
Thanks zimba for clarifying. But which one is best to enter i.e. Management Consultant (2423) pertaining to initial and extension Tier 1 entrepreneur application whereas business is already closed 2 years ago.Zimba wrote: ↑Tue Jul 05, 2022 6:46 pmSOC does not mean shortage occupation code It stands for Standard Occupational Classification
Enter an SOC code that is close to what your skills are: https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... -and-codes
marcnath wrote: ↑Fri Jul 08, 2022 4:29 pmThis is a Dependent application. I would say the SOC is rather irrelevant here. Don't worry too much about it - it is probably there because the form is the same for all the various visa types. In the paper form days, this was not even a question for Tier 1 Entrepreneurs or their dependants