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Thanks, Obie,Obie wrote:If you have been earning this rate for 6 months, then it makes no sense to use section B.
Category B: Less than 6 months with current employer or
variable income – person residing in the UK
5.3.1. This category can be used where the applicant’s partner (and/or the applicant if they are
in the UK with permission to work) is in salaried or non-salaried employment at the date
of application, but has not been with the same employer and/or not earning the income
level relied upon in the application for at least 6 months prior to the date of application. It
can therefore be used by those who have been with their current employer for less than
6 months, or who have been with their current employer for at least 6 months but
earning a variable income and wish to be considered in this category rather than under
Category A.
Yes, I can, but it will require more documentation.seagul wrote:I think you can use category B which is allowed if you cannot meet income threshold by not earning required income.
You seem to be confused as to what you should have earned by the sixth month. This can be broken down into two parts:faisaltanoli wrote:I was confused that in last six(6) month I have earned less then £18600, though my annual gross income is £33953 whether it will let me come under category A and application will not be refused
Thanks Mobeen,MobeenSaeed wrote:You seem to be confused as to what you should have earned by the sixth month. This can be broken down into two parts:faisaltanoli wrote:I was confused that in last six(6) month I have earned less then £18600, though my annual gross income is £33953 whether it will let me come under category A and application will not be refused
i) If you're on non-salaried, then, by the sixth month you need to have earned a total of £9300.
ii) If you're on salaried, then, the lowest wage is taken from your 6 months of payslips and that is multiplied by 12 to obtain your gross annual salary. If each of your monthly wage is on or above £1550, you're fine.
if you're part i, then you're fine as you have already earned well above that. But, if you're part ii, then, you need to make sure each of your monthly wage for the past 6 months is on or above £1550.
You would be correct to go with Category A as you meet the requirements.faisaltanoli wrote:Thanks Mobeen,
I am fall in part ii category. My minimum salary per month is approx £2830 since last six months. It never fall then this amount. I am thinking that I would be fine using "category A"
April 2017: £3098seagul wrote:Best if you provide us the last 6 months wages figures.
sorry for being bit dumb, but why non-salaried route? I have fixed annual salary of £33953.00. The variation is just because of mileage.seagul wrote:I don't know with these figures you were asking and confusing yourself with category B. It's simply fit for category A non-salaried route.
seems logicalseagul wrote:HO don't care the reasons for variable income. All they care what is the wages figure and since your last 6 months wages varying then more likely falls under non-salaried.
How do I mention on application form that I am applying under category A non-salaried category. It just say Category A and Category Bseagul wrote:HO don't care the reasons for variable income. All they care what is the wages figure and since your last 6 months wages varying then more likely falls under non-salaried.
seagul wrote:I don't know with these figures you were asking and confusing yourself with category B. It's simply fit for category A non-salaried route.
This is wrong. He should be applying Cat A, Salaried. Read the official guidelines published by HO, on page 30:seagul wrote:HO don't care the reasons for variable income. All they care what is the wages figure and since your last 6 months wages varying then more likely falls under non-salaried.
I believe you are referring to page 27 of the application form. It looks similar to, Leave To Enter application (VAF 4A appendix 2, specifically), so, you will not have the option of writing/ticking salaried or non-salaried; this will be shown in your payslips, employment letter and a cover letter (not sure if you need it for this application).faisaltanoli wrote:How do I mention on application form that I am applying under category A non-salaried category. It just say Category A and Category B
The stuff you wrote in bold is exactly my point. All overtime and bonuses from salaried employment will be calculated based on the approach from non-salaried employment. You have forgotten to notice that this presupposes the individual is receiving a set income (annually), hence why it's mentioned overtime for salaried and not overtime for non-salaried, bonuses for salaried employment and not non salaried employment etc. And the area I'm quoting from is of the following title:seagul wrote:@mobeensaeed:
Your self assumed interpretation about the bold paragraph on page 30 is incorrect and incomplete because even the bold paragraph clearly mentioning to use non-salaried income netted to treat overtime/commission/bonuses etc. If you still disagree then can you again give the bold points from official book instead your own interpretation which says that after using non-salaried formula added it back to annual salaried income.
And the area you studied from official book relates to overseas resident returning uk see also case studies there.
"All overtime in salaried employment will be calculated based on the approach to income from non-salaried employment.seagul wrote:If you wish you can continue over that because the area you are highlighting is neither clear there nor backed by proper case studies from within UK and also causing your interpretation wrong.