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This is a year old post matey , we both probably are wasting our time replying on this post.argus7 wrote:The new ILR counting continuous residency and employment states that there should not be a break in employment and the migrant must be economically active .
newbie_2013 wrote:This is a year old post matey , we both probably are wasting our time replying on this post.argus7 wrote:The new ILR counting continuous residency and employment states that there should not be a break in employment and the migrant must be economically active .
Nevertheless It was no where mentioned in the ILR rules that there should be no break in employment (this doesnt break continuous residency at all, may be for work permits, but not for tier 1). I believe it's practically impossible for everyone to be employed for 5 years. As long as one has enough points at the time of ILR and if one satisfies other requirements like absences, no public funds, no criminal records, etc, they should be absolutely fine. Other requirements like p60s, NI contributions, HMRC history would only strengthen the documents you submit as a part of the application, but not being employed will no way deter your prospects of getting an ILR. Earning enough points at the time of the application itself proves that one is a highly skilled migrant.
Sorry I didn't get what you've meant: You came to the UK on 13th Aug 2010, then back to the UK again on 28th Oct 2010?argus7 wrote:newbie_2013 wrote:This is a year old post matey , we both probably are wasting our time replying on this post.argus7 wrote:The new ILR counting continuous residency and employment states that there should not be a break in employment and the migrant must be economically active .
Nevertheless It was no where mentioned in the ILR rules that there should be no break in employment (this doesnt break continuous residency at all, may be for work permits, but not for tier 1). I believe it's practically impossible for everyone to be employed for 5 years. As long as one has enough points at the time of ILR and if one satisfies other requirements like absences, no public funds, no criminal records, etc, they should be absolutely fine. Other requirements like p60s, NI contributions, HMRC history would only strengthen the documents you submit as a part of the application, but not being employed will no way deter your prospects of getting an ILR. Earning enough points at the time of the application itself proves that one is a highly skilled migrant.
Not really. Reading this from the policy guidance will help.
1.The period between entry clearance being issued and the applicant entering the UK may be counted toward the qualifying period, as long as it does not exceed 90 days.
This can occur if the applicant is delayed travelling to the UK. Provided the period of delay does not exceed 90 days, it will not be counted as an absence.
2.If the absences are in connection with other employment outside the UK, which demonstrates the UK employment is secondary, these are not permitted absences,
and the continuous period requirement is considered broken.
My case is similar. Came to UK first on 13th August 2010 Visa stamp EC: 15th July 2010
Came back to UK again in Oct 28th 2010.Was still employed In home country (India) till October
So according to new ILR rules my continuous residency would have been broken in the first year itself.
I came on 13th aug 2010 and left after 15 days, to get my visa and passport stamped within the 90 daysnewbie_2013 wrote:Sorry I didn't get what you've meant: You came to the UK on 13th Aug 2010, then back to the UK again on 28th Oct 2010?argus7 wrote:newbie_2013 wrote:This is a year old post matey , we both probably are wasting our time replying on this post.argus7 wrote:The new ILR counting continuous residency and employment states that there should not be a break in employment and the migrant must be economically active .
Nevertheless It was no where mentioned in the ILR rules that there should be no break in employment (this doesnt break continuous residency at all, may be for work permits, but not for tier 1). I believe it's practically impossible for everyone to be employed for 5 years. As long as one has enough points at the time of ILR and if one satisfies other requirements like absences, no public funds, no criminal records, etc, they should be absolutely fine. Other requirements like p60s, NI contributions, HMRC history would only strengthen the documents you submit as a part of the application, but not being employed will no way deter your prospects of getting an ILR. Earning enough points at the time of the application itself proves that one is a highly skilled migrant.
Not really. Reading this from the policy guidance will help.
1.The period between entry clearance being issued and the applicant entering the UK may be counted toward the qualifying period, as long as it does not exceed 90 days.
This can occur if the applicant is delayed travelling to the UK. Provided the period of delay does not exceed 90 days, it will not be counted as an absence.
2.If the absences are in connection with other employment outside the UK, which demonstrates the UK employment is secondary, these are not permitted absences,
and the continuous period requirement is considered broken.
My case is similar. Came to UK first on 13th August 2010 Visa stamp EC: 15th July 2010
Came back to UK again in Oct 28th 2010.Was still employed In home country (India) till October
So according to new ILR rules my continuous residency would have been broken in the first year itself.
My clarification is regarding unemployment during the 5 year qualifying period. Unemployment will never affect ILR application as long as you have enough points at the time of ILR application, and you have proof that you were actively seeking employment during these years. Also overseas employment can be shown as apart of ILR application as long as the absence threshold is below 180 days and if it meets other requirements. There are cases here where the applicant has successfully shown overseas employment as a part of previous earnings.
I have been researching on this as I will be showing my overseas earnings for my ILR application next month. And I've contacted UKBA aswell. They confirmed that overseas employment can be shown (you wont get any points for UK experience, but thats not a problem if you have enough points covered in earnings)If, during the period for which we are considering the applicant’s previous earnings, he/she has earned money from outside the United Kingdom, he/she can include these in the calculation to score points for earnings. The applicant should provide details of the overseas earnings, in the original currency in which they were paid. The applicant should convert these earnings into pounds sterling by using the closing exchange rate on the OANDA website for the last day of the period for which he/she has claimed earnings in that currency.
Hope so, Let me know how your applications goes, as far as UKBA are concerned they change rules every yr and I have a long way to go......newbie_2013 wrote:http://www.ukba.homeoffice.gov.uk/sitec ... iew=Binary
Page 40 clearly states:
I have been researching on this as I will be showing my overseas earnings for my ILR application next month. And I've contacted UKBA aswell. They confirmed that overseas employment can be shown (you wont get any points for UK experience, but thats not a problem if you have enough points covered in earnings)If, during the period for which we are considering the applicant’s previous earnings, he/she has earned money from outside the United Kingdom, he/she can include these in the calculation to score points for earnings. The applicant should provide details of the overseas earnings, in the original currency in which they were paid. The applicant should convert these earnings into pounds sterling by using the closing exchange rate on the OANDA website for the last day of the period for which he/she has claimed earnings in that currency.
I strongly believe the points you've quoted are for the situation if the absence threshold was exceeded.
Hope that helps.
cheers