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Thanks a lot CR001 for your swift response.
Does she need to be 3 years residence as the spouse of British Citizen? All her stay in UK has been as a spouse on Tier1 G PBS dependent visa and while the main applicant was on different statuses (1yr 4months on Tier G + 1 yr on ILR + 2yr 5months since British Citizen).
She needs 3 year residence and be married to a BC at the time of application to apply based on Section 6(2) of the nationality act, even if you only become BC the day before she applies. There has been no change in this rule in the nationality laws.Chase53 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 3:20 pmRegarding your answer no4Does she need to be 3 years residence as the spouse of British Citizen? All her stay in UK has been as a spouse on Tier1 G PBS dependent visa and while the main applicant was on different statuses (1yr 4months on Tier G + 1 yr on ILR + 2yr 5months since British Citizen).
Is this a new rule? I always thought being spouse of a British Citizen and married for 5 years and obtaining ILR would suffice.
Ah I get it now. So for Citizenship, she has to be a resident in the country for 3 years and be married to the British citizen at the time of application and it doesn't matter when their spouse has received their citizenship.She needs 3 year residence and be married to a BC at the time of application to apply based on Section 6(2) of the nationality act, even if you only become BC the day before she applies. There has been no change in this rule in the nationality laws.
Don't confuse the 5 years residence to apply for ILR with the requirements for Citizenship. They are completely different rules and requirements.
Correct yes. Make sure on the date that she does apply for citizenship, that she was physically present in the UK at the same time 3 years ago.
Is that the UKVI Red Route option (i.e. not the Blue route option)??
Are you sure??
Price
Standard service £125.00 + VAT* (£150.00)
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Fast Track 24 hour service costs an extra £164.00 + VAT* (£196.80)
Fast Track 48 hour service costs an extra £114.00 + VAT* (£136.80)
Actually you are correct. My bad, I was looking at the blue route and selected those services individually and hence the reason for my question no 3 above. That was a proper confusion from my side.Are you sure??
https://www.naric.org.uk/visas%20and%20 ... rvice.aspx
Price
Standard service £125.00 + VAT* (£150.00)
**Upgrade to:
Fast Track 24 hour service costs an extra £164.00 + VAT* (£196.80)
Fast Track 48 hour service costs an extra £114.00 + VAT* (£136.80)
Code: Select all
As per - https://www.ielts.org/book-a-test/find-a-test-location
IELTS Life Skills - A1, A2 and B1
IELTS Life Skills - A1: is for the family route
• Family life as a partner of a settled person (spouse/partner)
• Family life as a parent (parent of a dependant).
IELTS Life Skills – A2: is for the family route (extension)
• Family life as a partner of a settled person (spouse/partner)
• Family life as a parent (parent of a dependant).
IELTS Life Skills – B1: Indefinite leave to remain
• Settlement/permanent residency.
IELTS Life Skills – B1: British Citizenship
• Naturalisation
yes, I switched the application to Red Route after you highlighted it before. I can't thank you enough for that, as I had chosen the wrong service previously.Make sure you have the correct NARIC, i.e. UKVI Red Route English and comparable assessment. Would have cost around £150.
I saw in some other posts that you need 6 sources cohabitation documents so thought of using P60s as address proofs.Why are you submitting P60s??
Part 3 is for someone who is financially dependent on someone else and if you are relying on those documents. Plus its self explanatory who needs to sign which part.Chase53 wrote: ↑Fri May 10, 2019 3:24 pmOne last thing regarding below,
6) Home Office consent form signed for bills under joint names (part 1 & Part 2) - ignored Part 3 as I believe Iam not required to sponsor her financially to obtain ILR, Please correct me if iam wrong.
Am I right in assuming that Part 3 is nor required for PBS dependent route to ILR as they don't need any sponsor?
Yes I agree and I just want to double check with a second pair of eyes as small things can be overlooked very easily.tier11417 wrote: ↑Fri May 10, 2019 3:39 pmPart 3 is for someone who is financially dependent on someone else and if you are relying on those documents. Plus its self explanatory who needs to sign which part.Chase53 wrote: ↑Fri May 10, 2019 3:24 pmOne last thing regarding below,
6) Home Office consent form signed for bills under joint names (part 1 & Part 2) - ignored Part 3 as I believe Iam not required to sponsor her financially to obtain ILR, Please correct me if iam wrong.
Am I right in assuming that Part 3 is nor required for PBS dependent route to ILR as they don't need any sponsor?