- 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
it is 8 days. you should not count 1st of May and 10 of May as you were in the country on those dates.immiuk1 wrote:Hello again
need some good inputs please as I am really really confused
Example I traveled from UK on 01 May to India and arrives in india on 02 May, now UK does not stamp departure date on my passport it only carries arrived entry from India dated 02 May and I return back to UK on 10 May.
So my question is how many days I am out of country , (10may-02may)-1= 7days or (10may-02may)=8 days or (10may-01may)-1=8 days or (10may-01may)=9 days
It might be confusing statements but they are really impt , one of my friend told me case officer at PEO looked at arrived dates in foreign country ?
the minus 1 he said is to exclude travel dates.
which one is right calc ?
thanks in adv
Hi 1664,1664 wrote:You don't count the leaving and arrival dates.
all dates in between will go towards the date out of country
Example
You left UK on 2-05-2012 and returned back on the 10-5-2012
number of days out of UK = 7 Days
So in this case you wouldn't need a lawyer.
Good Luck ..
Appriciate your input and I know it is as simple as you say it is; however almost 95% of applicants who apply look at their passport stamps and not the date of travel. Are you saying all of those applications are wrong?sushdmehta wrote:Absence from "UK" during a given whole day (24 hrs) is what that counts. Even if you have spent a second in UK on a given date, you were not absent from UK on that day .. and you don't count that day as an absence. Simple!
Ignore all other inferences / permutations / combinations, e.g. - when you embarked / disembarked in a foreign country.
Yes, you are using the right terminology... "Inaccurate"sushdmehta wrote:Wrong, no ... inaccurate, yes.
UKBA is not at fault if applicants rely on stamps in their passport(s) to determine their presence in / absence from UK .. rather than keeping a record of their travel dates during their qualifying residential period in UK. If one keeps such a record, there's no confusion in following the above explanation.
You can say ... someone must be mad to keep such records ... perhaps!, but the response is to your question "are all such applications wrong" .. rather than a comment on individual behaviour / practice.