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My concern is whether this arrangement will be accepted when we apply for ILR.
I have requested a new contract stating the rolling status and,
This is not required.upon our departure, a letter confirming our residency dates.
You are overthinking.Would this be acceptable?
Sure - thank you for this.CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 13, 2024 8:40 amMy concern is whether this arrangement will be accepted when we apply for ILR.
Yes. There is no law that says you must have a new signed tenancy agreement each time the last one runs out.
I have requested a new contract stating the rolling status and,
You are contradicting yourself here. You cannot ask for a contract to state a rolling month status. Rolling month simply extends the tenancy agreements existing conditions but with no fixed start and end date.
This is not required.upon our departure, a letter confirming our residency dates.
You are overthinking.Would this be acceptable?
You are required to provide a selection of evidence proving cohabitation in both your names. Plan accordingly.
For cohabitation evidence: All you need to know about cohabitation evidenceThe applicant should provide evidence as to the basis on which the accommodation
is or will be owned or occupied (including rented) by the family unit. This may for
example be in the form of a copy of the property deeds, a letter from a bank or
building society as to the mortgage arrangements, a lease agreement and rent book,
or a letter from a family member or friend who is making the accommodation
available to the applicant and their family unit.
aha I see, thanks for this. I will give that a read.zimba wrote: ↑Wed Jun 19, 2024 1:47 pmThere is no period. For proof of adequate accommodation you need:
For cohabitation evidence: All you need to know about cohabitation evidenceThe applicant should provide evidence as to the basis on which the accommodation
is or will be owned or occupied (including rented) by the family unit. This may for
example be in the form of a copy of the property deeds, a letter from a bank or
building society as to the mortgage arrangements, a lease agreement and rent book,
or a letter from a family member or friend who is making the accommodation
available to the applicant and their family unit.
A cover letter suffices.Selina001 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 3:44 pmUpdate: he just took it and passedbut there’s a slight issue.
His first name and surname have been swapped…
We did call the helpline and they said it shouldn’t be an issue when he comes to apply next summer.
I just wanted some opinions on this. Do you think it will cause any issues or is it best to write a covering letter with the application to explain the swapping of the names?
Thanks
S
Thanks, that is ok then.AmazonianX wrote: ↑Wed Jun 26, 2024 12:28 amA cover letter suffices.Selina001 wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2024 3:44 pmUpdate: he just took it and passedbut there’s a slight issue.
His first name and surname have been swapped…
We did call the helpline and they said it shouldn’t be an issue when he comes to apply next summer.
I just wanted some opinions on this. Do you think it will cause any issues or is it best to write a covering letter with the application to explain the swapping of the names?
Thanks
S
Yes , there IS proof in this instance. He took it - was allowed to sit it; the test centre checked his ID etcalterhase58 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 26, 2024 8:35 amWhat "some people" are saying are just approaches one can take, for example if there's absolutely no proof of it being taken previously it's easier just to take it again. Trying to get help from UKVI is time consuming and probably fruitless.