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Not clear why you think you need to do this.Limboed wrote:... we need to maintain a UK address, especially for my future naturalisation process
Thanks Noajthan. I am not sure really, this is the advice that was given to us by the lawyer. I will be declaring my absences, even to the tax authorities and of course the naturalisation department because I will be requesting discretion on the basis of being on a UN deployment, so everything will be clear and transparent from my end. We will also be visiting during these coming months as the UK remains our family's base, so the link to the UK will not even be broken for us as a family. The lawyer's explanation of it was that we needed to prove we continued to establish home here. But again the reason I wanted to get your opinions here is because I have had my doubts about how thorough their research has been.noajthan wrote:Not clear why you think you need to do this.Limboed wrote:... we need to maintain a UK address, especially for my future naturalisation process
Maintaining an address doesn't prove residency as clearly you won't be in it for those 6 months.
Paying bills in someone else's house to give some sort of illusion of residency is not a right thing to do.
And, if you are planning to request discretion on absences, keeping on a rented property (whether occupied or not) doesn't really demonstrate holding a 'substantial part of your estate' in UK. (It's clearly not part of your estate).
You may as well leave the house and get another when you return. Declare absences on the application form.
HO caseworker will simply weigh up and assess your case against the current rules when the time comes.
I can't see how an empty rented house helps you. And paying bills for a rented house you are not actually living in may be edging a little close to manufacturing evidence of 'residency'.Limboed wrote:...
Thanks Noajthan. I am not sure really, this is the advice that was given to us by the lawyer. I will be declaring my absences, even to the tax authorities and of course the naturalisation department because I will be requesting discretion on the basis of being on a UN deployment, so everything will be clear and transparent from my end. We will also be visiting during these coming months as the UK remains our family's base, so the link to the UK will not even be broken for us as a family. The lawyer's explanation of it was that we needed to prove we continued to establish home here. But again the reason I wanted to get your opinions here is because I have had my doubts about how thorough their research has been.
Umm, definitely not a good look, especially since our intention is to be fully transparent, so don't want to shoot ourselves in the foot. Do others agree with Noajthan (thanks for your patience)?noajthan wrote:I can't see how an empty rented house helps you. And paying bills for a rented house you are not actually living in may be edging a little close to manufacturing evidence of 'residency'.Limboed wrote:...
Thanks Noajthan. I am not sure really, this is the advice that was given to us by the lawyer. I will be declaring my absences, even to the tax authorities and of course the naturalisation department because I will be requesting discretion on the basis of being on a UN deployment, so everything will be clear and transparent from my end. We will also be visiting during these coming months as the UK remains our family's base, so the link to the UK will not even be broken for us as a family. The lawyer's explanation of it was that we needed to prove we continued to establish home here. But again the reason I wanted to get your opinions here is because I have had my doubts about how thorough their research has been.