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Visit visa is out of it due to haven had previous application on settlement route.
I did write in my cover letter that I am an essential part in my children's lives and leaving them will have harsh consequences on their upbringing. but apparently that argument is not strong enough. So according to my understanding now even though I am divorced with my X i cannot sponsor anyone on FLR(fp) parent route!!AmazonianX wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 5:39 amVisit visa is out of it due to haven had previous application on settlement route.
What grounds for appeal wound your want to put forward for clear ineligibility to sponsor due to your own current visa?
The study route can be taken.
It will appear right to family life not an essential consideration.verified wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 4:44 pmI did write in my cover letter that I am an essential part in my children's lives and leaving them will have harsh consequences on their upbringing. but apparently that argument is not strong enough. So according to my understanding now even though I am divorced with my X i cannot sponsor anyone on FLR(fp) parent route!!AmazonianX wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 5:39 amVisit visa is out of it due to haven had previous application on settlement route.
What grounds for appeal wound your want to put forward for clear ineligibility to sponsor due to your own current visa?
The study route can be taken.
If we take study route, what are the chances of getting student visa as she already applied for spouse visa and refused..Can't they say that you are deceiving us as your purpose of going to U.K is not study but to reunite with your husband !!
thanks
thanks for your replyAmazonianX wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 8:47 pmIt will appear right to family life not an essential consideration.verified wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 4:44 pmI did write in my cover letter that I am an essential part in my children's lives and leaving them will have harsh consequences on their upbringing. but apparently that argument is not strong enough. So according to my understanding now even though I am divorced with my X i cannot sponsor anyone on FLR(fp) parent route!!AmazonianX wrote: ↑Wed Apr 21, 2021 5:39 amVisit visa is out of it due to haven had previous application on settlement route.
What grounds for appeal wound your want to put forward for clear ineligibility to sponsor due to your own current visa?
The study route can be taken.
If we take study route, what are the chances of getting student visa as she already applied for spouse visa and refused..Can't they say that you are deceiving us as your purpose of going to U.K is not study but to reunite with your husband !!
thanks
You are correct on your thoughts about the study route. However unlike visit visa, you are investing much more finances and committing to a longer term visa. While nothing is guaranteed for the outcome it probably stands higher chance than visit visa.
The other option is to wait till you get ILR as there is no other visa route you can change to to facilitate your being eligible to sponsor someone else.
thanks for your replysecret.simon wrote: ↑Fri Apr 23, 2021 12:24 amKeep in mind that to apply via a student visa route, you will firstly need to get admission to an appropriate course (a full-time student on a postgraduate level course (RQF level 7 or above) that lasts 9 months or longer) and pay the overseas fees rate for that course, which are generally two to three times the home student rates.
I did a part-time Masters course in the UK while working full-time on my work visa and even though I was paying a fair whack in taxes, I still had to pay upwards of £10,000 in overseas fees for a course for which the Home Student fees were £3,400 at the time.
You will most likely not be eligible for student loans either, which have specific residential and immigration status requirements.
You will also need to prove that your partner has the funds to support themselves (£845 a month (for up to 9 months) for courses in London or £680 a month (for up to 9 months) for courses outside London).
Simply put, just going down the road of a student visa will require massive financial resources and a substantial investment of time, as you are expected to be a full-time student and will have a limit of working only 20 hours a week.
You really have just two options; wait until your ILR OR leave the UK and move to a country which would allow your spouse and you to live together. I'd suggest the former, but it entirely depends on you.
The earlier refusal will certainly be a part of their consideration. The Home Office do tend to look at the entirety of the person's UK Immigration history, not just the application in front of them. Whether it will be disregarded or ignored is not for me to say.