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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
CR001 wrote:You need to earn £18,600pa to qualify for a spouse visa and must submit at least 6 months worth of evidence.
Student loan and mortgage should not affect the visa.
CR001 wrote:A point to note as some members have been refused because of this, is that if your weekend job is 'cash in hand', you must put it in the bank. If it does not appear on your bank statement as a salary/wage payment, HO will not take it into account.
Bank statement MUST match what your payslips say.
ok thank you for that. your advice is highly appreciated!CR001 wrote:Yes, that would be preferable. Assuming of course that you will also get payslips.
I only mentioned the 'cash in hand' scenario as many 'weekend' jobs are cash in hand and people tend to spend it rather than put it in the bank
As per your wages of £14500 you need the following savings to cover shortfall:shuma95 wrote:Hi all hope you are well!
i hope someone can help me with my query.
i will be applying for spouse visa using cash savings and income. i currently earn £14,500 gross per annum, how much savings will i need to meet the threshold? and can i show the savings in multiple bank accounts or will it need to be in 1 account?
any help is greatly appreciated.
thank you.
yes i did study for 2 years before i dropped out, but as i was living from parents house and also received a few grants from my previous institution. i dropped out of uni a few years ago and the loans company have told me i only pay back the money once i am earning over 22k. i am not one to blow any money, unlike most students do.CR001 wrote:You cannot use your student loan to prove 'savings'. It is not your money. A student loan is for studying. If you have not spent it, did you study at all?