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"Only whole days' absences should be counted. The dates of departure and arrival are not to be counted as absences."rlpkamath wrote:The UKBA website says that you should be physically in the country on the exact day 5 yrs before the day they receive the application i.e. at the start of the qualifying period.
Lastly what counts as being physically in the country: do you need to have spent the entire 24 hours here or could it be a travel day?
Fee Changesdrzeevoh73 wrote:i have same querry. i have appointment on 2/4/13.
which fees will be applicable on me??
anybody.....any suggestion ?
I cannot Find your above ref about 5 years but it says the followingrlpkamath wrote:Hi - I have a question:
The UKBA website says that you should be physically in the country on the exact day 5 yrs before the day they receive the application i.e. at the start of the qualifying period.
Does anyone know if the UKBA date of receipt is the date of the appointment with the NCS or the date the application arrives at the UKBA offices?
Also the fees increase starting 6/4. My NCS appoint is 5/4. Do I pay the old rate or the new rate?
Lastly what counts as being physically in the country: do you need to have spent the entire 24 hours here or could it be a travel day?
Thanks in advance.
When does the residential qualifying period start?
The residential qualifying period is calculated from the day when we receive your application. Most unsuccessful applications fail because the applicant was not present in the UK at the beginning of the residential qualifying period. You must make sure you meet this requirement before you make your application. For example, if we receive your application on 25 March 2010, you must show that you were in the UK on 26 March 2005.
Thanks CR001CR001 wrote:Reference is in this link and copy :
http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/briti ... uirements/
When does the residential qualifying period start?
The residential qualifying period is calculated from the day when we receive your application. Most unsuccessful applications fail because the applicant was not present in the UK at the beginning of the residential qualifying period. You must make sure you meet this requirement before you make your application. For example, if we receive your application on 25 March 2010, you must show that you were in the UK on 26 March 2005.
Are you married/civil p to a British citizen?starter wrote:I cannot Find your above ref about 5 years but it says the followingrlpkamath wrote:Hi - I have a question:
The UKBA website says that you should be physically in the country on the exact day 5 yrs before the day they receive the application i.e. at the start of the qualifying period.
Does anyone know if the UKBA date of receipt is the date of the appointment with the NCS or the date the application arrives at the UKBA offices?
Also the fees increase starting 6/4. My NCS appoint is 5/4. Do I pay the old rate or the new rate?
Lastly what counts as being physically in the country: do you need to have spent the entire 24 hours here or could it be a travel day?
Thanks in advance.
Residential requirements
In order to demonstrate the residential requirements for naturalisation you need to:
have been resident in the United Kingdom for at least three years (this is known as the residential qualifying period); and
have been present in the United Kingdom three years before the date of your application; and
have not spent more than 270 days outside the United Kingdom during the three-year period; and
have not spend more than 90 days outside the United Kingdom in the last 12 months of the three-year period; and
have not been in breach of the immigration rules at any stage during the three-year period.