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thanks milan69 for your response...My passport was expired when i applied for ILR....so i got my ILR based on 10 years continuous legal residency....milan69 wrote:HO might want to have proof that you were in the UK for the required period.
Letter from your employer, P60's, bank statements, medical letters can help prove that you were present.
if i apply through NCS they will ask the gap between my passports?do i have to show my acknowledgment letter from UKBA when i applied for ILRmilan69 wrote:You don't have to prove your residential status when applying.
Your passport serves as proof that you were in UK for the qualified period.
If HO has any doubts they will ask you for further proof.
Hi akhurshid.akhurshid wrote:You need to prove that you were present in UK for last 5/3 years. Passport is one way to prove it. Any gap between passports has to be backed by other proof like pay slips. NCS will definitly ask you for the. And they might refuse to send your application without it.
Had this issUe when I applied for wife. She has 5 months gap and no Payslips. NCS refused to accpet invoices and letter in her name as they weren't from govt institution. Luckily her new passport had her old passport number so we explained that on page 15 and advised if that is not enough, HO is more than welcomed to class the period as absence as she had no other absence. We received her approval in 5 weeks.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... eriods.pdfThe continuous period in the UK must be lawful. This means the applicant must have spent
the qualifying period here continuously with leave to enter or remain and must not have
breached their leave conditions.
Thanks for ur response...i have 18 months gap between my passports i can proof 12 months with child benfit,Ho letter when i applied for ILR, pay slips....but i am confused with remaining 6 months at that time i was not working can i proof with Car ownership, car insurance, credit card statementsakhurshid wrote:You need to prove that you were present in UK for last 5/3 years. Passport is one way to prove it. Any gap between passports has to be backed by other proof like pay slips. NCS will definitly ask you for the. And they might refuse to send your application without it.
Had this issUe when I applied for wife. She has 5 months gap and no Payslips. NCS refused to accpet invoices and letter in her name as they weren't from govt institution. Luckily her new passport had her old passport number so we explained that on page 15 and advised if that is not enough, HO is more than welcomed to class the period as absence as she had no other absence. We received her approval in 5 weeks.
I suppose you could. NHS appointment letter or any letter from your GP confirming if you have attended any appointments would be best.muskan ali wrote:Thanks for ur response...i have 18 months gap between my passports i can proof 12 months with child benfit,Ho letter when i applied for ILR, pay slips....but i am confused with remaining 6 months at that time i was not working can i proof with Car ownership, car insurance, credit card statementsakhurshid wrote:You need to prove that you were present in UK for last 5/3 years. Passport is one way to prove it. Any gap between passports has to be backed by other proof like pay slips. NCS will definitly ask you for the. And they might refuse to send your application without it.
Had this issUe when I applied for wife. She has 5 months gap and no Payslips. NCS refused to accpet invoices and letter in her name as they weren't from govt institution. Luckily her new passport had her old passport number so we explained that on page 15 and advised if that is not enough, HO is more than welcomed to class the period as absence as she had no other absence. We received her approval in 5 weeks.
i took my ILR based on 10 years continues lawful long residency March 2014...i bave read in immigration board someone told that there must not be any problem.As u took ur ilr based on 10 years long resdiencyakhurshid wrote:I suppose you could. NHS appointment letter or any letter from your GP confirming if you have attended any appointments would be best.muskan ali wrote:Thanks for ur response...i have 18 months gap between my passports i can proof 12 months with child benfit,Ho letter when i applied for ILR, pay slips....but i am confused with remaining 6 months at that time i was not working can i proof with Car ownership, car insurance, credit card statementsakhurshid wrote:You need to prove that you were present in UK for last 5/3 years. Passport is one way to prove it. Any gap between passports has to be backed by other proof like pay slips. NCS will definitly ask you for the. And they might refuse to send your application without it.
Had this issUe when I applied for wife. She has 5 months gap and no Payslips. NCS refused to accpet invoices and letter in her name as they weren't from govt institution. Luckily her new passport had her old passport number so we explained that on page 15 and advised if that is not enough, HO is more than welcomed to class the period as absence as she had no other absence. We received her approval in 5 weeks.
Many thanks akhurshid, page 27 of that document gave me the answer I believe:akhurshid wrote:A very good question which I cant find straight answer to.
Here is something from CW's guide to grant ILR.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... eriods.pdfThe continuous period in the UK must be lawful. This means the applicant must have spent the qualifying period here continuously with leave to enter or remain and must not have breached their leave conditions.
Reading that kinda suggests that there are no visa breaks allowed for residence requirement.
Last para gives clear cut answer as far as I understand, meaning if you have visa but it expires while you were outside UK and you don't apply within 28 days, your clock for ILR is reset.This page tells you about lawful leave which continues whilst absent from the UK.
The continuous period is maintained if the:
applicant leaves the UK without valid leave, but re-enters with new entry clearance within 28 days of their leave expiry date, or
applicant leaves the UK with valid leave and re-enters the UK whilst that leave remains valid, provided the absence(s) do not exceed 180 days in a relevant 12 month period.
If the applicant’s leave expires whilst they are outside the UK and they apply for entry clearance within 28 days, the applicant’s continuous period is not broken. In this circumstance, if they successfully get a new grant of entry clearance, the period spent outside of the UK will count towards the 180 days allowable absence. This includes any time:
after the expiry of their leave
while the entry clearance application is under consideration, and
where they are delayed entering the UK once entry clearance has been granted.
If the applicant’s leave expires whilst they are outside the UK and they apply for new entry clearance more than 28 days after their previous leave expires, the continuous period is broken and leave is not aggregated.
Well, there we gofwd079 wrote:Many thanks akhurshid, page 27 of that document gave me the answer I believe:akhurshid wrote:A very good question which I cant find straight answer to.
Here is something from CW's guide to grant ILR.
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... eriods.pdfThe continuous period in the UK must be lawful. This means the applicant must have spent the qualifying period here continuously with leave to enter or remain and must not have breached their leave conditions.
Reading that kinda suggests that there are no visa breaks allowed for residence requirement.
Last para gives clear cut answer as far as I understand, meaning if you have visa but it expires while you were outside UK and you don't apply within 28 days, your clock for ILR is reset.This page tells you about lawful leave which continues whilst absent from the UK.
The continuous period is maintained if the:
applicant leaves the UK without valid leave, but re-enters with new entry clearance within 28 days of their leave expiry date, or
applicant leaves the UK with valid leave and re-enters the UK whilst that leave remains valid, provided the absence(s) do not exceed 180 days in a relevant 12 month period.
If the applicant’s leave expires whilst they are outside the UK and they apply for entry clearance within 28 days, the applicant’s continuous period is not broken. In this circumstance, if they successfully get a new grant of entry clearance, the period spent outside of the UK will count towards the 180 days allowable absence. This includes any time:
after the expiry of their leave
while the entry clearance application is under consideration, and
where they are delayed entering the UK once entry clearance has been granted.
If the applicant’s leave expires whilst they are outside the UK and they apply for new entry clearance more than 28 days after their previous leave expires, the continuous period is broken and leave is not aggregated.
Thanks again for that link, quite useful.
Contact HMRC for employment history.muskan ali wrote:can someone give me advice plz my husband due to apply for citizenship but there is some confusion regarding 10 years employment history.
My husband work in the past for couple of weeks but can not remember exact date.Does he have to mention as it was for couple weeks and can't remember the date.
Hi sushdmehta want to ask that HO asking for statement of funds which one is better to send credit card statement or joint account statement.Mostly i am using credit card statementsushdmehta wrote:The answer to your question is already available in many of the posts in this topic.
muskan ali wrote:Hi everyone, I applied for Naturalisation August 2015 I had a gap of 1 year between my passports.Today I received a letter asking for further documents to proof my presence in Uk during the gap.They are asking for wage slips,p60,statement of funds and any other source of income held.I am not able to provide wages slips and p60 as I was not working.so for the statement of funds do I have to provide my credit card statements and I have joint statement with my partner can I also provide that Bank statement
Thanks for ur guidance in advance
A credit card statement doesn't show your balance of available funds...it shows how much you owe.muskan ali wrote:Hi sushdmehta want to ask that HO asking for statement of funds which one is better to send credit card statement or joint account statement.Mostly i am using credit card statementsushdmehta wrote:The answer to your question is already available in many of the posts in this topic.
Thanks
Hi casa but home office asking for statement of funds the letter they have sent.if I sent my credit card statements it is showing my presence as I was using most of the time.Casa wrote:muskan ali wrote:Hi everyone, I applied for Naturalisation August 2015 I had a gap of 1 year between my passports.Today I received a letter asking for further documents to proof my presence in Uk during the gap.They are asking for wage slips,p60,statement of funds and any other source of income held.I am not able to provide wages slips and p60 as I was not working.so for the statement of funds do I have to provide my credit card statements and I have joint statement with my partner can I also provide that Bank statement
Thanks for ur guidance in advance
In addition to Sushdmehta's response, the evidence you have suggested doesn't prove that you have been physically present in the UK during the period in question.