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Correct yourself. All genuine "highly skilled" people are paying taxes and most of them have no problem with earning points. These people rarely face delay in visa application. Only those who uses fradulent means may have problem with taxes and showing earning.sahi wrote:Everyone is looking but no reply? is it something new for you guys or what?
any suggestion will help my friend or many more because i know most of the people are not paying tax becasue its hard to show earning in these days.
No need to comment on content of your post. You made clear about yourself. Here there are many like me who work for reputed organisations doing really highly skilled work. I know many such people. I am sure that only minority have problem in proving earning. Reasons may be the way in which they applied for initial visa.sahi wrote:manojk005 wrote:Correct yourself. All genuine "highly skilled" people are paying taxes and most of them have no problem with earning points. These people rarely face delay in visa application. Only those who uses fradulent means may have problem with taxes and showing earning.sahi wrote:Everyone is looking but no reply? is it something new for you guys or what?
any suggestion will help my friend or many more because i know most of the people are not paying tax becasue its hard to show earning in these days.
Oh realy, that is why out of ten people nine are showing thier earning either from oversease or saying i'm director of my own company, taking salary and dividends or working for umbrella company does it make any sense, if everyone is so skilled or qualified then why everyone is director of their own company, they should be employed by well reputed companies in uk.
If one can earn from his home country then what he is doing here.
so i think you need to correct yourself.
I guess this is company responsibility to pay your taxes and NI contributions to HMRC as they are one who deduct at source. It will be really unfair to punish employee.naveen_hc wrote:What if they find out the the company has not paid any tax? Is there any chances where I can fight on the ground that it was not my fault.
Any particular reason Why he/she did not fight against this. Tier2 tax should be paid by the company not by him/her. Therefore he/she could have fought against them on the ground that was not their fault.Sushil-ACCA wrote:This is not for scaring to readers but
HO is now days check all tax payment history , I know one sure case was refused His ILR and immediately Extension on ground of non payment of tax
he was on t2 for 2 years (3 yrs ON T1) company not paid PAYE , HIS GROUND WAS it was not his fault , refused ILR , than he tried to extend T1 refused
got notice now in Home country very recent case
so those who have not paid their taxes either on extension or initial visa
regularise / pay proper tax and get letter from taxman , before going to ILR
manojk005 wrote:sahi wrote:manojk005 wrote:sahi wrote:Everyone is looking but no reply? is it something new for you guys or what?
any suggestion will help my friend or many more because i know most of the people are not paying tax becasue its hard to show earning in these days.
Correct yourself. All genuine "highly skilled" people are paying taxes and most of them have no problem with earning points. These people rarely face delay in visa application. Only those who uses fradulent means may have problem with taxes and showing earning.
Oh realy, that is why out of ten people nine are showing thier earning either from oversease or saying i'm director of my own company, taking salary and dividends or working for umbrella company does it make any sense, if everyone is so skilled or qualified then why everyone is director of their own company, they should be employed by well reputed companies in uk.
If one can earn from his home country then what he is doing here.
so i think you need to correct yourself.
No need to comment on content of your post. You made clear about yourself. Here there are many like me who work for reputed organisations doing really highly skilled work. I know many such people. I am sure that only minority have problem in proving earning. Reasons may be the way in which they applied for initial visa.
BTW from where you got statistics that 9 out of 10 are showing overseas earning or saying director? I do not see anything wrong if some one is director or have overseas earning. He/she may be as genuine as a salaried employee.
This thread is a bit old but might help anyway, if someone has been self employed then UKBA will surely check with HMRC if taxes have been paid or not, even if the applicant does not wish to show any income from self-employment in their extension application.sahi wrote:Hi,
One of my friend applied tier1 visa on selfemployed basis and he got it after a lot of trouble like invoices queries, HO sent queries to client to verify the invoices. After getting the visa he did not pay tax on his net profit. Now if he is going to extend his visa soon, will that affect his application?
By the way, HO kept his account and did not return.
Any suggestion please. wheter he should go for selfemployed again or show as employee or can he change that tax return, if he can then what is the procedure to tell hmrc.
I agree with you scottferguson.scottferguson wrote:Being a immigrant myself I am quiet sad about the attitude of people here in UK about the immigrants, but I can see why. I am paying a good amount of tax and cannot claim any benefits(apart from NHS-which havent used by me yet) for at least 5 years, but every time a negative news come out in the media(eg. todays news about migrants claiming benefits) the migrant group as a whole gets a bad name. Why cant these people pay their taxes and be at the right side of the law? No matter which job you do, pay the taxes and be responsible.
sahi wrote:Oh realy, that is why out of ten people nine are showing thier earning either from oversease or saying i'm director of my own company, taking salary and dividends or working for umbrella company does it make any sense, if everyone is so skilled or qualified then why everyone is director of their own
company, they should be employed by well reputed companies in uk.
If one can earn from his home country then what he is doing here.
so i think you need to correct yourself.
nnj10 wrote:sahi wrote:Oh realy, that is why out of ten people nine are showing thier earning either from oversease or saying i'm director of my own company, taking salary and dividends or working for umbrella company does it make any sense, if everyone is so skilled or qualified then why everyone is director of their own
company, they should be employed by well reputed companies in uk.
If one can earn from his home country then what he is doing here.
so i think you need to correct yourself.