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If she qualifies for a student visa, her relationship status is irrelevant. I thought that unmarried partner meant that both people had to be living together in a relationship akin to marriage and there is no tick for boyfriend/girlfriend. So single would make sense.catmando wrote:Hi,
I have posted a similar question in the student visa section, but have since noticed that people in the marriage part may be able to help me. I’ve noticed lots of people coming on student visas marry their UK partner when studying; normally they were in the relationship before getting the student visa. Did you all declare your relationship status with a British citizen before applying for the student visa?
My Canadian girlfriend wants to put my details on her student visa application so I can help fund her studies with my savings, and to be completely honest about her long-term relationship. But won’t this make them ask for proof that she will leave the UK after her MA ends? Won’t they be paranoid she will stay illegally afterwards? And if questioned should we tell immigration that there is at least some chance we will apply for settlement either as common-law or even as spouse later on, but that this isn’t definite as we both have careers that involve a lot of movement.
Sorry for asking again, but I’m trying to collect as much info as I can in order to make the best decisions early.
Best,
Armando
Yes in your case, unmarried partner is what she should tick.catmando wrote:Hi!
Thanks for the quick reply. We have been living together for the past two years outside the UK and have a joint bank account, so probably should tick unmarried partner. Re: fulfilling the student visa requirements, I see what you mean, but isnt it a requirement that the student must leave the UK after the course has ended, and so the immigration officer must be convinced that this will happen?
Armando.
I think if you show proof of your savings and suitable accommodation which you clearly will have on arrival, you will get granted a visa. Especially if you have enough savings to live off of for a year. However, you also need to make sure that you have proof (in the form of bills) to show that you have lived together for two years. If you're ready you can get married. That way you won't have to prove cohabition.catmando wrote:Thanks again. I think with the unmarried partner visa, I would face the same problems as with the spouse visa? She has been the one with a job for the past two years, I've been supporting myself with my savings and through her (we live in north africa btw). Thus, I couldnt show six months of UK pay slips to prove that i could support her. Still though...I had been considering that I could put my parents address as a temporary accomodation - they own their home and have spare rooms. And although I dont have a job I do have significant savings, so was wondering if immigration would overlook the lack of job on arrival. I would certainly have more than enough to pay rent and council tax and still have over £400/month left for a year. I also have post-grad level education, so would expect to have good work prospects (even during these dark times...)
What do you think?
Armando.
Yes they do but there have been plenty of granted applications where the applicant did have a boyfriend in the uk. Based on that, I doubt it matters.BLK235 wrote:I might be wrong, but is it not UKBA expectation that student will go back to their home country after completion their studies?
If that's the case they may doubt it will happen if they learn you have a bf in the UK.
I don't know that you need to go into that amount of detail. Rather than effectively tell them that you might move out in two or three weeks, if there is the need to say anything like this at all, just say "in due course" rather than "2 or 3 weeks".Im sure that my parent's house would be fine as accomodation, but would it be a problem if I said it was only temporary, maybe just two or three weeks, while we looked for a place to live for ourselves?
Or does all of that sound ok?catmando wrote:I would be looking for a job as soon as I arrived and would be happy to take anything from minimum wage upwards; I'm not looking for anything in particular, as there are very few jobs in my area of expertise so it could take years to find one of them, if I was lucky though they would probably start at least 20,000/year.
I was not just asking about bedrooms!The house has three bedrooms and only my parents live there, no kids or even pets, im not sure about the sizes of the rooms, though two of the bedrooms certainly exceed 40 square feet.
You need to prove that your parents own the property. Go to the land registry website and you can pay £4.00 for the title plan and £4 for the title register which you will be able to print out.catmando wrote:Sorry, as well as the bedrooms there is a converted loft (into an office) over 40sq feet, a living room/dining area over 40 sq feet, plus assorted corridors of varying lengths. The house being privately owned, what proof do you think we would need to submit? I'm guessing obviously a letter from my parents saying we could stay there for a start... Much of the evidence I've seen on the forum has been for rented accomodation...
Re: foreign tuition, she should be getting a scholarship (fingers crossed) - but if, for whatever reason, that doesn't work out, I think we would go for the unmarried/fiancee/married route as we had been planning to move to the UK anyway and also talked about marriage before. Then we would both get jobs, and she could look into studying in the future.
Cheers!
Ooo, interesting. One thing, are you sure the pdf. print out will do? This has worked for you and others? It says on the website that the pdfs are for information purposes only and are not guarunteed, and that I need to send off for an official copy after filling in a form.boulevardofbrokendreams wrote:You need to prove that your parents own the property. Go to the land registry website and you can pay £4.00 for the title plan and £4 for the title register which you will be able to print out.catmando wrote:Sorry, as well as the bedrooms there is a converted loft (into an office) over 40sq feet, a living room/dining area over 40 sq feet, plus assorted corridors of varying lengths. The house being privately owned, what proof do you think we would need to submit? I'm guessing obviously a letter from my parents saying we could stay there for a start... Much of the evidence I've seen on the forum has been for rented accomodation...
Re: foreign tuition, she should be getting a scholarship (fingers crossed) - but if, for whatever reason, that doesn't work out, I think we would go for the unmarried/fiancee/married route as we had been planning to move to the UK anyway and also talked about marriage before. Then we would both get jobs, and she could look into studying in the future.
Cheers!
Well an OISC registered advisor told me that both of those should suffice. It seems to have worked for others yes. However, they also provided photos of the inside of the property with the measurements in detail.catmando wrote:Ooo, interesting. One thing, are you sure the pdf. print out will do? This has worked for you and others? It says on the website that the pdfs are for information purposes only and are not guarunteed, and that I need to send off for an official copy after filling in a form.boulevardofbrokendreams wrote:You need to prove that your parents own the property. Go to the land registry website and you can pay £4.00 for the title plan and £4 for the title register which you will be able to print out.catmando wrote:Sorry, as well as the bedrooms there is a converted loft (into an office) over 40sq feet, a living room/dining area over 40 sq feet, plus assorted corridors of varying lengths. The house being privately owned, what proof do you think we would need to submit? I'm guessing obviously a letter from my parents saying we could stay there for a start... Much of the evidence I've seen on the forum has been for rented accomodation...
Re: foreign tuition, she should be getting a scholarship (fingers crossed) - but if, for whatever reason, that doesn't work out, I think we would go for the unmarried/fiancee/married route as we had been planning to move to the UK anyway and also talked about marriage before. Then we would both get jobs, and she could look into studying in the future.
Cheers!
Wow, I've learnt so much today! Thanks everyone!