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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha
I am referring to settlement. Not permissions to stay.zimba wrote: ↑Mon Feb 13, 2023 5:49 pmThe Appendix Private Life retains the four grounds on which permission can be granted based on private life. These are:
•be a child resident in the UK for at least seven years who can’t reasonably be expected to leave (‘seven-year children’), which will now be paragraph PL 3.1
•be aged 18 to 24 and resident here for at least half their life (‘young adults’), now PL 4.1
•be resident here for more than 20 years, PL 5.1(a)
•face very significant obstacles to integration in their country of return, PL 5.1(b)
Everyone else needs 10 years under the rules to qualify for ILR
PL 14.1. An applicant who has, or last had, permission to stay on the private life route as a child, or young adult who met the half-life test under PL 4.1, must have lived in the UK for a continuous qualifying period of 5 years with permission as set out in PL 14.3 or 14.4.
PL 14.2. An applicant who is aged 18 or over at the date of application and does not meet the requirement in PL 14.1 must have lived in the UK for a continuous qualifying period of 10 years with permission set out in PL 14.3. or 14.4.
Hm - so as long as I met the half life test at the time of the last permission grant - I'm all good?zimba wrote: ↑Mon Feb 13, 2023 6:26 pmYes, I get that. The question specifically is whether you meet the 'half life' test as per PL 4.1 above
PL 14.1. An applicant who has, or last had, permission to stay on the private life route as a child, or young adult who met the half-life test under PL 4.1, must have lived in the UK for a continuous qualifying period of 5 years with permission as set out in PL 14.3 or 14.4.
PL 14.2. An applicant who is aged 18 or over at the date of application and does not meet the requirement in PL 14.1 must have lived in the UK for a continuous qualifying period of 10 years with permission set out in PL 14.3. or 14.4.
The question is how come you didn't get ILR under long residence if you meet that test ??
I renewed my visa under the Private life rules back in 2020 when I was 24 - this new 5 year route wasn't a thing back then - looks like there was a concession on it in 2021 and then it was brought into the rules mid last year. I only realised this now that my visa is coming to the end but glad that I can still apply for ILR on it.
I dont know what my residency status was before 18 - pretty sure I held no visa and was most likely here undocumented as a child. Hence I've had to start again from the age of 18. If the rule changes didnt happen - I would have no choice but to apply for a 4th and final extension which would be another 2,5 years therefore bringing me to 10 but since the rule changes have been introduced - the requirement is now 5.meself2 wrote: ↑Thu Feb 16, 2023 11:36 amI feel like there's confusion here, so let's go into more details. Not an expert on private life, but from my point of view "half your life" means spending at least 12 years in the UK when you were 24, if I understand it correctly
going by the information provided (you held private life visa twice before reaching 24), you only have 5 years of residence
how would you consider yourself as someone who passed half life test? and as noted by Zimba, if you were living there for 12 year by 24, you could've applied 2 years earlier via long residence (combination of any visas that sums up for 10 years).
Hey - what documents did you include with your application? Also thinking of just doing it myself, it doesnt seem too difficult if all I have to prove is 18-24, half life and living in the UK for 5 continuous yearsmumakk wrote: ↑Fri Feb 17, 2023 1:13 amHey, I can’t answer your question but I’m in a similar situation except I’m 30 & I’ve lived here since I was 9. I’ve completed 7.5 years lawfully (almost 9 years if you include the time waiting between visas). I was first granted my visa as young adult under aged 18-24
I was due for my last renewal of 2.5years in nov 22 & I opted to apply for Ilr instead after reading about this new rule. As with all my applications I’ve not used a lawyer as I think it pretty straightforward & lawyers are too expensive. I say just apply for Ilr on if you don’t get Ilr they’ll give you the extension of 2.5years (read that on the Ukvi website) so apart from it being abit more expensive you can’t really lose.
I applied in October 22 & I'm still waiting for a decision but I’m optimistic… I mean I’ve lived here 21 years, I’m a nurse in the nhs & I have a child that’s a British citizen but who knows.
I say apply for that Ilr! & don’t use a lawyer the application is so straightforward & they’ll tell you what documents you need, you definitely don’t need a lawyer to do that x
Great - all of that is true for me. Will take a look at the application processzimba wrote: ↑Fri Feb 17, 2023 1:44 amTo summarise, if all the below is true then your ILR should succeed:
• you were first given a visa on the basis of your private life when you were aged between 18 and 24 and you met the half-life test
• you initially arrived in the UK as a child
• you have lived in the UK for at least 5 continuous years
Have you had any reply yet?mumakk wrote: ↑Fri Feb 24, 2023 9:28 amSo, the only documents they asked for were;
- my current passport
- proof of my parental responsibility of my child
- current biometric permit
But I also included:
- a cover letter
- my expired passport
- my child’s British passport & birth certificate
- copy of my degree
- council tax bill
- tenancy agreement
- a letter from my employer (showing job title, salary & type of employment)
- 3 months payslip & 3 months bank statements (I only added these because I already had them as I was originally going to apply for flr)
Tbh I think I should’ve included a copy of my original visa letter stating I was between 18-24 when I was granted leave (I think I’ll probably upload that today).
One tip I’d give you is do the Life in the UK test as soon as possible because you can’t progress pass a certain point of the application unless you put in the reference number showing you passed. & the test was HARD! I left it until 2 weeks before my renewal was due & ended up failing my first attempt so I had to rebook for the next day which was more expensive. I literally only passed because I spent the night memorising the questions & answers. Get the app - it’s the same questions that’s in the actual test.
Hope that helps x
Thats okay! You have to enable email notifications in 'board preferences' in your profile.mumakk wrote: ↑Tue Apr 25, 2023 7:57 pmYh I did. I got indefinite a couple weeks ago- literally a couple days after I hit the 6month mark!
Sorry for the late reply, I didn’t get an email notification about your reply. What did you apply for btw? Not sure if the time came yet? How did you find the life in the uk test? & did you end up doing the application yourself?
Hey probably abit soon but I just thought about this thread & I thought I’d come and ask if you got a response yet? Xbailfyr44 wrote: ↑Fri Apr 28, 2023 9:29 amOh didnt know they were going digital! Good to know.
It is crazy, the cheapest rate I got from a solicitor was £800. Most were like £1200.. its an absolute joke and robbery. Most of them didnt even know that I was eligible for ILR - its actually so worrying that these people are "solicitors". And when you speak to many of them, they really like to throw around big words and overcomplicate everything - basically making it very daunting to apply for yourself..
Ill update as soon as I get anything back, hopefully soon but I dont plan on going anywhere so I dont really mind