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I think that is right ... she is clearly no longer on an extended holiday!the BHC in Ottawa claim it is not possible at all and my wife's WHV is null and void as we are married....help??
Why that form? That would only be to make an application in the UK. But she is in Canada. Go to the www.ukvisas.gov.uk website and download a form VAF2 and also the INF4 guidance notes.what is form FLR(M)? can someone point me in the direction of it online?
Could be a problem? It needs to be shown that the applicant will not need to claim certain Public Funds. Your lack of employment will not help ... but dependent upon circumstances it might still be possible to pass the financial test even if you are currently unemployed.As I am currently in Canada I am between jobs in the UK
John wrote:I think that is right ...the BHC in Ottawa claim it is not possible at all and my wife's WHV is null and void as we are married....help??
I think .... Yes those qualifications will show the ability to earn .... and the lack of needing to pay for accommodation will also assist.haggishunter wrote:I have a bachelors degree, plus an HND, and 2 HNC's... will this be of help?
in addition my parents have offered accommodation free of charge to my wife and i.
Just to chime in with my experience - I am a Canadian who married a Briton while here on a WHV visa. We went to Greece for something of a honeymoon, and in order to jump the inordinately long re-entry queue at passport control at Gatwick we both went through the 'All Other Passports' queue (she on a UK passport, me with a Canadian passport with a WH visa) - the passport control officer asked us about our circumstances and said that 'we needed to get it sorted as soon as possible' but allowed me entry without qualms on the WHV clearance, so that visa itself wasn't specifically invalidated as far as she was concerned.John wrote:It is quite clear from the immigration rules that a change of circumstances invalidates an EC. That does not specifically mention a WHV holder getting married but the rules are clear enough to cover, for example, the holder of a student visa who has stopped studying ... etc etc.
Clearly this holder of a WHV is no longer requiring entry into the UK as a holidaymaker .... they would be entering for the purpose of settlement.
The marriage of a WHV holder does not automatically invalidate their visa. For example, if one WHV holder marries another WHV ... both intending to leave the UK at the end of their holidays ... they would not have a problem continuing their holidays on their WHVs. But that is not the circumstances being outlined here.