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What were the absences in the year immediately preceding the date of application?
Thanks for replyingsecret.simon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 7:26 pmWhat were the absences in the year immediately preceding the date of application?
How many absences between February 2017 and February 2018?
Thanks againsecret.simon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 7:46 pmHow many absences between February 2017 and February 2018?
Presumably you mean October 2017?
Indeed, sorry updated my reply.
Ah no way I didn't know you could apply under a different section? That would make more sense then yes!secret.simon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 8:48 pmI take that back. Your wife may best wait till atleast October 2018, one year after the grant of the ILR and apply under Section 6(1), i.e. a normal application rather than one under Section 6(2) as the spouse of a British citizen.
If she applies under Section 6(1), then she will meet the 450 days in five years absence. Make sure that she was physically in the UK in October 2013.
Section 6(2) - spouse of a British citizen - allows absence of 270 days in the last three years, which your wife will almost certainly have breached as well.
I suggest reapplying in October 2018. Not sure why the Home Office would suggest 2020 myself.
And from now on, try not to travel until your wife gets her citizenship.
I think the caseworker just use section 6(2) to determine her leave, such only until 2020 she can satisfy.secret.simon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 8:48 pmI take that back. Your wife may best wait till atleast October 2018, one year after the grant of the ILR and apply under Section 6(1), i.e. a normal application rather than one under Section 6(2) as the spouse of a British citizen.
If she applies under Section 6(1), then she will meet the 450 days in five years absence. Make sure that she was physically in the UK in October 2013.
Section 6(2) - spouse of a British citizen - allows absence of 270 days in the last three years, which your wife will almost certainly have breached as well.
I suggest reapplying in October 2018. Not sure why the Home Office would suggest 2020 myself.
And from now on, try not to travel until your wife gets her citizenship.
Yeah it looks that waycyclina1 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 11:15 pmI think the caseworker just use section 6(2) to determine her leave, such only until 2020 she can satisfy.secret.simon wrote: ↑Thu Apr 26, 2018 8:48 pmI take that back. Your wife may best wait till atleast October 2018, one year after the grant of the ILR and apply under Section 6(1), i.e. a normal application rather than one under Section 6(2) as the spouse of a British citizen.
If she applies under Section 6(1), then she will meet the 450 days in five years absence. Make sure that she was physically in the UK in October 2013.
Section 6(2) - spouse of a British citizen - allows absence of 270 days in the last three years, which your wife will almost certainly have breached as well.
I suggest reapplying in October 2018. Not sure why the Home Office would suggest 2020 myself.
And from now on, try not to travel until your wife gets her citizenship.