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Welcome to the forum.BradleyMinns wrote:Good evening I'm hoping someone could shed some light on the length of time I can be away from my partner and still get a family of settled person visa?
Been together 6 years, Engaged 2. We met here in the UK, I then moved to South Africa for 4.5 years so we have proof of relationship etc.. We decided we would like to settle back here in the UK. My research at the time led me to believe that I must return, find a job earning over £18,600 and once I have 6 months payslips and a house then she could apply for her family of a settled person visa?
I returned in June, started a job that meets the requirements in September so I have 3.5 months untill I have 6 payslips..
But now we've heard today that we cant spend more than 6 months apart!? Forgive me but I cant see the logic? If she is in South Africa and must apply for this visa from her home country and I must be here settled and earning the minimum amount how can we still be living together?
Any advise or insight to calm the situation would be greatly appreciated.
Casa,Casa wrote:Why not consider marrying in a UK Registry Office for less than £100 and having a wedding blessing and larger celebration later.
Although admittedly entering on a fiance visa would require an additional application after the wedding, when your wife would have to switch to a FLR(M) spouse visa with a fee of £811 (postal) + the NHS surcharge of £500
If you're now living in the UK, your name on the tenancy agreement in SA won't be considered as continuing co-habitation.
If the UPV is refused you'll lose the £1195 application fee.
Unfortunately, many of the Immigration Rules aren't logical.
Edit: Reading through your first post again, you've been living together for 4+ years. This may well mean that the 6 month separation won't be relevant, but standby for others to comment.
See: (iv) a person who has been living with the applicant in a relationship akin to a marriage or civil partnership for at least two years prior to the date of application,
This suggests that you qualify.
Just a thought: how much would be a return flight to South Africa for you? Less than the fiancé visa application fee?BradleyMinns wrote:Casa,Casa wrote:Why not consider marrying in a UK Registry Office for less than £100 and having a wedding blessing and larger celebration later.
Although admittedly entering on a fiance visa would require an additional application after the wedding, when your wife would have to switch to a FLR(M) spouse visa with a fee of £811 (postal) + the NHS surcharge of £500
If you're now living in the UK, your name on the tenancy agreement in SA won't be considered as continuing co-habitation.
If the UPV is refused you'll lose the £1195 application fee.
Unfortunately, many of the Immigration Rules aren't logical.
Edit: Reading through your first post again, you've been living together for 4+ years. This may well mean that the 6 month separation won't be relevant, but standby for others to comment.
See: (iv) a person who has been living with the applicant in a relationship akin to a marriage or civil partnership for at least two years prior to the date of application,
This suggests that you qualify.
Thank you again for the reply.
Yes we lived together for 4.5 years, it would be great if that would make the difference. I had heard originally that we couldn't be apart for more than 1 year. I feel that we should qualify by what I had read on the .gov site but would be great to clarify.. Is their anyway to find out from an official?
What you say about the fiance visa makes sense and will be our next option. Certainly cant afford to lose the money on a denied visa. I see that it gives you 6 months to marry, if this was done in the first month can we then apply for the spouse visa straight away? Would she have to leave the country? Can she work once she has switched to the spousal?
Sorry for all the questions, what an ordeal!
You may have missed this earlier in the threadCasa wrote:Yes, you would be able to switch to FLR(M) immediately after the wedding without leaving the UK.
Your wife wouldn't be able to work until FLR(M) has been granted but if the application is submitted in person at a PSC for the premium fee of £1311, the visa is generally granted on the same day.
A postal application may take up to 3 months to process, so you may want to weigh up the cost of the lower fee of £811 against the level earnings which could make up for the premium fee.
Please open your own topic with this. High jacking another member's thread is unfair and causes confusion.NZama1 wrote:Hi,
After marrying my fiance, we intend to apply for flr(m) from within the uk, however how do we provide evidence of living together as fiance currently on six month visa. Do we need to register joint utility and bank accounts inorder to prove living at same address together?
The basic procedure:BradleyMinns wrote:Thank you very much for all the info, we are weighing up both options.
Is there a "HOW TO" post that covers how to apply for the fiance visa and what documentation is needed?
Thanks again,
Brad