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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
Your wife will also have to pay the NHS surcharge of £500 in addition to the visa fee.tallojani wrote:Need help folks,
My wife was granted 33 months visa on March 2014, she has been living with me here in UK since April 2014 and her visa expires in December 2016. Me and our 17 month old son have go British passport.
I would like clarification on the followings:
1) When can i apply for an extension on FLR(M)? Your wife applies, not you. No earlier than 28 days before 2.5 year anniversary of her entry into the UK/
2) Would her old A1 english test be accepted with this extension? A2 level may well be required before she qualifies for her visa extension
3) I am studying an undergraduate degree for which i get NHS bursary (£9600) per annum, i work part time £739.58 post tax monthly salary, would this be enough to meet the income threshold? What do you earn pre-tax?
4) I receive child benefit for my son, could this be a problem? Not if you are claiming in your name only.
5) We receive child tax credit and working tax credit,although i applied for them on my name but the letters from WTC and CTC show the account as joint and have both our names, would this be an issue? Tax credits must be claimed in JOINT NAMES
Please kindly give your advice.
.CR001 wrote:1. November onwards should be fine.
2. No, she needs A2 for applications from October 2016.
3. Not sure. Does your wife work at all?
4. No, not an issue at all.
5. Tax credits MUST be claimed in JOINT name with your spouse.
Don't forget she also has to pay the £500 immigration health surcharge before she can submit her application. This is in addition to the visa application fee (£811 for postal or £1311 for premium service in person).
tallojani wrote:is A2 test a new rule, because the FLR(M) form and guidance that i printed suggests i can use the old A1 city and guild english test as it was used for last application. No announcement of a date as yet I believe. See New A2 English Requirement (click)
Tax credits are indeed claimed on joint names, would this cause a problem? No
Wife is starting a job tommorw but does not get paid untill her two weeks probationary period is over as we can not evidence her potential income we cant really rely on her income.
Thank you for your quick reply (only marginally slower than miss speedy fingers),Casa wrote:Your wife will also have to pay the NHS surcharge of £500 in addition to the visa fee.tallojani wrote:Need help folks,
My wife was granted 33 months visa on March 2014, she has been living with me here in UK since April 2014 and her visa expires in December 2016. Me and our 17 month old son have go British passport.
I would like clarification on the followings:
1) When can i apply for an extension on FLR(M)? Your wife applies, not you. No earlier than 28 days before 2.5 year anniversary of her entry into the UK/
2) Would her old A1 english test be accepted with this extension? A2 level may well be required before she qualifies for her visa extension
3) I am studying an undergraduate degree for which i get NHS bursary (£9600) per annum, i work part time £739.58 post tax monthly salary, would this be enough to meet the income threshold? What do you earn pre-tax?
4) I receive child benefit for my son, could this be a problem? Not if you are claiming in your name only.
5) We receive child tax credit and working tax credit,although i applied for them on my name but the letters from WTC and CTC show the account as joint and have both our names, would this be an issue? Tax credits must be claimed in JOINT NAMES
Please kindly give your advice.
Edit: Beaten by Miss Speedy Fingers, CR001
Sorry i just checked, the exact bursary figure i get is £9692 yearly, monthly wage is £748.80 pre-tax, that makes it a total off £18677.60.Casa wrote:If I understand correctly, it appears that a bursary will qualify towards meeting the income level. CR001 may have comments to add.
6.1.6. Income from a maintenance grant or stipend (not a loan) associated with undergraduate study or postgraduate study or research received by the applicant‟s partner or the applicant can be counted towards the financial requirement. The person must be currently in receipt of the grant or stipend or will be within 3 months of the date of application, and the grant or stipend must be payable for a period of at least 12 months from the date of application or from the date on which payment of the grant or stipend will commence. Where the grant or stipend is paid on a tax-free basis, see section 6.4. of this guidance for further information.
No problem with tax credits...you're claiming correctly.
Edit: Even with the bursary, you still appear to be £125.04 under the £18,600 p.a minimum income level.