- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
Some members have yes and others have not received and been refused.silverchloride wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 8:33 pmI might be wrong but I remember reading here somewhere that an applicant (who was not physically present in the UK 5 years on the day before applying) got a letter from UKVI asking them to resubmit the cover letter (signed and dated) so that their application could be considered, which would have been refused otherwise. Perhaps the moderators can confirm?
All the best.
Hiss518 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 14, 2018 2:13 pmIm having the same problem with the date of application in which i was away 5 years ago.....and now got my application refused .....
If i were to submit request for reconsideration.. could i backdate the application date? Or i can only change to the later date ?
I submitted my application online...in the letter frm UKBA, they consider my online submission date as the date of my application.....
I went for ndrs to submit my supporting docs as well as my passport application.....
Any helps and advise will be very much appreciated
I am not sure that you can change the date of application if you go in for reconsideration. Reconsideration will only take into account the evidence that was submitted for the original application.ss518 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 14, 2018 2:13 pmIm having the same problem with the date of application in which i was away 5 years ago.....and now got my application refused .....
If i were to submit request for reconsideration.. could i backdate the application date? Or i can only change to the later date ?
The Home Office have no discretion to disregard the physical presence requirement. All they can do is get you to redeclare the form on a new date, which should be within two months of the original date, which would meet the five year physical presence requirement.
Hi christine761,christine761 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 9:31 amI recently submitted my application for Naturalisation online. Unfortunately I have just realised that my list of absences from the UK for the past 5 years includes a 3 night trip in 2013, which means I was not physically present in the UK 5 years before the date on which I submitted the application online. The date on which I received the email from the Home Office confirming receipt of my application, and the date of my appointment with the Nationality Document Return Service, would both be fine (as I was in the UK 5 years prior to these). However, I fear the date I submitted the application (which appears on the front of the printed application form) will be the date used.
Does the Home Office have any discretion around this point or will my application be automatically refused and I will lose the fee?
Thank you for any assistance.
It is clearly stated in the AN guidance notes, page 7, point 2.2.acquamarina wrote: ↑Fri Aug 24, 2018 4:52 pmHi christine761,
I have submitted my application 2 days ago and I just found out I'm in the same situation, that unfortunately means I wasn't physically in the UK on 22nd/23rd August 2013. I lived and worked here for 6 years, it just happened I was on holiday those days! And I found no mention of this in the application process. I litterally just found out.
Just like you, if I knew I would have waited 3 more days to submit it (as I came back from holiday on 25th August 2013). What are the chances I can appeal for reconsideration and exercise of discretion?
Did you get approved by any chance?
I'm keeping my fingers crossed and hoping for the best, I just don't want to pay another £1,330+....
Thank you anyone for your help.
2.2 Fill in this table showing the periods you have be en away from the UK during the last 5 years (3 years if you are married to or in a civil partnership with a British citizen). Insert the number of days you were away from the UK in the last column ignoring the day you left and the day you arrived back in the UK. If there is not enough room for all your absences, then continue on page 22. Add up the total and write it in the space indicated.
You must also check that you were physically present in the UK 5 years (3 years if you are married to or in civil partnership with a British citizen) before the date that the application will be received by the Home Office or other receiving authority (see “Where to send your application form” in this guide). If you do not meet this requirement your application is unlikely to be successful, unless you were in the UK armed forces at that time.
If you were on holiday on the 22nd/23rd August 2013 but you were validly in the UK under any of the Visas category that counts towards your residency, then I do not see what the issue is - Unless I have misunderstood your post.acquamarina wrote: ↑Fri Aug 24, 2018 4:52 pmHi christine761,christine761 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 9:31 amI recently submitted my application for Naturalisation online. Unfortunately I have just realised that my list of absences from the UK for the past 5 years includes a 3 night trip in 2013, which means I was not physically present in the UK 5 years before the date on which I submitted the application online. The date on which I received the email from the Home Office confirming receipt of my application, and the date of my appointment with the Nationality Document Return Service, would both be fine (as I was in the UK 5 years prior to these). However, I fear the date I submitted the application (which appears on the front of the printed application form) will be the date used.
Does the Home Office have any discretion around this point or will my application be automatically refused and I will lose the fee?
Thank you for any assistance.
I have submitted my application 2 days ago and I just found out I'm in the same situation, that unfortunately means I wasn't physically in the UK on 22nd/23rd August 2013. I lived and worked here for 6 years, it just happened I was on holiday those days! And I found no mention of this in the application process. I litterally just found out.
Just like you, if I knew I would have waited 3 more days to submit it (as I came back from holiday on 25th August 2013). What are the chances I can appeal for reconsideration and exercise of discretion?
Did you get approved by any chance?
I'm keeping my fingers crossed and hoping for the best, I just don't want to pay another £1,330+....
Thank you anyone for your help.
You are misunderstanding the physcially present requirement. A person must be physcially present (ie not out of the UK for business, travel, holidays) on the exact same date 5/3 years previously as the date they apply for citizenship. This is mandatory. It has nothing to do with 'being away but have a valid permit to be in the UK'. Even though the OP has been in the UK for 6 years, for citizenship it is only the 5 years immediately preceding the date of application that counts and it is the start of that 5 year period that you must have been physically present in the UK.UK_Tier1 wrote: ↑Fri Aug 24, 2018 5:50 pmIf you were on holiday on the 22nd/23rd August 2013 but you were validly in the UK under any of the Visas category that counts towards your residency, then I do not see what the issue is - Unless I have misunderstood your post.acquamarina wrote: ↑Fri Aug 24, 2018 4:52 pmHi christine761,christine761 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 9:31 amI recently submitted my application for Naturalisation online. Unfortunately I have just realised that my list of absences from the UK for the past 5 years includes a 3 night trip in 2013, which means I was not physically present in the UK 5 years before the date on which I submitted the application online. The date on which I received the email from the Home Office confirming receipt of my application, and the date of my appointment with the Nationality Document Return Service, would both be fine (as I was in the UK 5 years prior to these). However, I fear the date I submitted the application (which appears on the front of the printed application form) will be the date used.
Does the Home Office have any discretion around this point or will my application be automatically refused and I will lose the fee?
Thank you for any assistance.
I have submitted my application 2 days ago and I just found out I'm in the same situation, that unfortunately means I wasn't physically in the UK on 22nd/23rd August 2013. I lived and worked here for 6 years, it just happened I was on holiday those days! And I found no mention of this in the application process. I litterally just found out.
Just like you, if I knew I would have waited 3 more days to submit it (as I came back from holiday on 25th August 2013). What are the chances I can appeal for reconsideration and exercise of discretion?
Did you get approved by any chance?
I'm keeping my fingers crossed and hoping for the best, I just don't want to pay another £1,330+....
Thank you anyone for your help.
You stated that you "lived and worked here for 6 years" in which case you must have had a visa category that entitled you to work and perhaps also qualified you to meet the permanent residency requirements.
The Residence requirement to be "physically present in the UK" for the 5 year period does not imply you have to be physically present in person for everyday of the 5 years, hence the absence cool-off limits. What it means is that you had a valid immigration permit that qualifies you for permanent residency 6 years, (in your case) to the date you submitted your application and you were already living in the UK on that date.
This is to prevent a situation where for an example, an applicant had a job permit issued to them and then only arrived in the UK 30days after but when they count their qualifying period, they use the date the permit was issued instead of when they arrived the UK. Hence you will see that the paper form under the "Residence Requirement" ask you to state the date you first arrived the UK.
This is from the Guide AN on Residency requirement:
"2.1 Enter the day you first arrived with a view to staying in the UK on a long-term basis, and the airport or seaport through which you then entered. If this is less than 5 years before the date on which we receive the application, or less than 3 years before this date if you are married to or the civil partner of a British citizen, you might not meet the residence requirement (see page 6 of the Booklet AN) and your application may be unsuccessful."
I read that, but the booklet had this to say also:CR001 wrote: ↑Fri Aug 24, 2018 6:24 pmYou are misunderstanding the physcially present requirement. A person must be physcially present (ie not out of the UK for business, travel, holidays) on the exact same date 5/3 years previously as the date they apply for citizenship. This is mandatory. It has nothing to do with 'being away but have a valid permit to be in the UK'. Even though the OP has been in the UK for 6 years, for citizenship it is only the 5 years immediately preceding the date of application that counts and it is the start of that 5 year period that you must have been physically present in the UK.UK_Tier1 wrote: ↑Fri Aug 24, 2018 5:50 pmIf you were on holiday on the 22nd/23rd August 2013 but you were validly in the UK under any of the Visas category that counts towards your residency, then I do not see what the issue is - Unless I have misunderstood your post.acquamarina wrote: ↑Fri Aug 24, 2018 4:52 pmHi christine761,christine761 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 9:31 amI recently submitted my application for Naturalisation online. Unfortunately I have just realised that my list of absences from the UK for the past 5 years includes a 3 night trip in 2013, which means I was not physically present in the UK 5 years before the date on which I submitted the application online. The date on which I received the email from the Home Office confirming receipt of my application, and the date of my appointment with the Nationality Document Return Service, would both be fine (as I was in the UK 5 years prior to these). However, I fear the date I submitted the application (which appears on the front of the printed application form) will be the date used.
Does the Home Office have any discretion around this point or will my application be automatically refused and I will lose the fee?
Thank you for any assistance.
I have submitted my application 2 days ago and I just found out I'm in the same situation, that unfortunately means I wasn't physically in the UK on 22nd/23rd August 2013. I lived and worked here for 6 years, it just happened I was on holiday those days! And I found no mention of this in the application process. I litterally just found out.
Just like you, if I knew I would have waited 3 more days to submit it (as I came back from holiday on 25th August 2013). What are the chances I can appeal for reconsideration and exercise of discretion?
Did you get approved by any chance?
I'm keeping my fingers crossed and hoping for the best, I just don't want to pay another £1,330+....
Thank you anyone for your help.
You stated that you "lived and worked here for 6 years" in which case you must have had a visa category that entitled you to work and perhaps also qualified you to meet the permanent residency requirements.
The Residence requirement to be "physically present in the UK" for the 5 year period does not imply you have to be physically present in person for everyday of the 5 years, hence the absence cool-off limits. What it means is that you had a valid immigration permit that qualifies you for permanent residency 6 years, (in your case) to the date you submitted your application and you were already living in the UK on that date.
This is to prevent a situation where for an example, an applicant had a job permit issued to them and then only arrived in the UK 30days after but when they count their qualifying period, they use the date the permit was issued instead of when they arrived the UK. Hence you will see that the paper form under the "Residence Requirement" ask you to state the date you first arrived the UK.
This is from the Guide AN on Residency requirement:
"2.1 Enter the day you first arrived with a view to staying in the UK on a long-term basis, and the airport or seaport through which you then entered. If this is less than 5 years before the date on which we receive the application, or less than 3 years before this date if you are married to or the civil partner of a British citizen, you might not meet the residence requirement (see page 6 of the Booklet AN) and your application may be unsuccessful."
Please do read the extract above that I posted from the guidance notes.
It is here, p14 at the bottom:silverchloride wrote: ↑Thu Jun 07, 2018 8:33 pmI might be wrong but I remember reading here somewhere that an applicant (who was not physically present in the UK 5 years on the day before applying) got a letter from UKVI asking them to resubmit the cover letter (signed and dated) so that their application could be considered, which would have been refused otherwise. Perhaps the moderators can confirm?
All the best.
Hi therechristine761 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 19, 2018 9:10 amBy way of update - thankfully the Home Office sent me the final page of my online application form to re-sign, and return to them on a date when I was physically present in the UK exactly 5 years earlier.
Hi, no I didn't notify them. I just spent a nervous few months waiting, and they contacted me. Good luck!Noneeapr2017 wrote: ↑Fri Nov 02, 2018 9:09 amHi therechristine761 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 19, 2018 9:10 amBy way of update - thankfully the Home Office sent me the final page of my online application form to re-sign, and return to them on a date when I was physically present in the UK exactly 5 years earlier.
Did u have to notify them when u Spot the mistake or u just waited for there response. As I have the same problem I was away for couple of days back in 2013 Thanks
Yes, your understanding is correct.Meesha wrote: ↑Thu Nov 08, 2018 2:13 pmHi Forum members,
I have read ur valuable comments about physical presence in UK for citizenship. So if one in applying on 3 years basis they require to be present in uk exactly 3 years prior to date of application. Lets say if one applies on 7th March 2019 on the basis of British spouse, one has to be at UK on 7th March 2016. I believe it has nothing to do with 5 years ago presence or absence in this regard?
Thanks for the reply . So I just have to wait for there decisionchristine761 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 08, 2018 1:03 pmHi, no I didn't notify them. I just spent a nervous few months waiting, and they contacted me. Good luck!Noneeapr2017 wrote: ↑Fri Nov 02, 2018 9:09 amHi therechristine761 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 19, 2018 9:10 amBy way of update - thankfully the Home Office sent me the final page of my online application form to re-sign, and return to them on a date when I was physically present in the UK exactly 5 years earlier.
Did u have to notify them when u Spot the mistake or u just waited for there response. As I have the same problem I was away for couple of days back in 2013 Thanks