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I thought he was referring to the ink stamp that had not had the offending word crossed out.bani wrote:It's just a grammatical thing, they can choose "for" or "until" to refer to duration (for) or expiry date (until) of your visa. Personally, I would've chosen "for 6 months" instead of "until 6 months", the second sounds awkward (Too bad they are not required to take English proficiency tests).
Yes, I am from the US and came here to the UK on a visa waiver program. It was mentioned while going through immigration in London that I can only stay 6 months in a 12 month period otherwise it would be like "I'm living here".Frontier Mole wrote:It is an indicator that it has been explained that you are allowed to stay for up to six months in any 12 month period. Was that the case? In other words if you leave and enter again there is a watch out for you to ensure you are not exceeding this point.
I guess you are from a visa waiver country?
So what would this [the stamp] say to the next immigration officer?Frontier Mole wrote:There was no slip of the pen, it is IO code for what I stated. The OP confirmed what happened. There are a number of other little indicators put on stamps to alert the next officer. I imagine the IO who placed the mark was old school or old school trained.
There is nothing in the immigration rules to say you can only stay 6 months in a 12 month period. Refusal for that reason itself would not be justified.Frontier Mole wrote:It is an indicator that it has been explained that you are allowed to stay for up to six months in any 12 month period. Was that the case? In other words if you leave and enter again there is a watch out for you to ensure you are not exceeding this point.
It is not and was never, as far as I can remember a signal. Underlining the IO number and the 'W' in the landing stamp are the only 2 signals allowed.Frontier Mole wrote:There was no slip of the pen, it is IO code for what I stated. The OP confirmed what happened. There are a number of other little indicators put on stamps to alert the next officer. I imagine the IO who placed the mark was old school or old school trained.
CorrectUKBAbble wrote:It is not and was never, as far as I can remember a signal. Underlining the IO number and the 'W' in the landing stamp are the only 2 signals allowed.Frontier Mole wrote:There was no slip of the pen, it is IO code for what I stated. The OP confirmed what happened. There are a number of other little indicators put on stamps to alert the next officer. I imagine the IO who placed the mark was old school or old school trained.
What do you mean by signals. I'm sorry but I am not understanding all of this. And as one reply said, "There is nothing said against staying only 6 months in a 12 month period". I was told opposite by the immigration officer.Mr Rusty wrote:CorrectUKBAbble wrote:It is not and was never, as far as I can remember a signal. Underlining the IO number and the 'W' in the landing stamp are the only 2 signals allowed.Frontier Mole wrote:There was no slip of the pen, it is IO code for what I stated. The OP confirmed what happened. There are a number of other little indicators put on stamps to alert the next officer. I imagine the IO who placed the mark was old school or old school trained.
Yes it is risky. Your 12 month period started when you first arrived, Jan 2008. You've already been here for 3 1/2 months since then. You're only allowed 2 1/2 more months until Jan 2009. So if you are coming back in October, make sure to leave in December.lukeanddeanna wrote:I was told that I cannot spend more than 6 months in a 12 month period. Also, that if I were denied I could not return for up to 10 years. This is exact words of the immigration officer.
I do not want to do anything wrong as I am going to be doing a Fiance Visa form and any denied entries or visas will count against me.
Can anyone simplify what everyone is saying and is it too risky for me to fly back at the end of October for 6 months in the UK?
Code: Select all
as opposed to a straightforward code 5N. What this does is alert the next IO who comes across the poster that there were some doubts about his intended visit, but these were not sufficient to lead to an outright refusal. The IO will/should then treat the poster with more than cursory interest. So Luke, if on your next "visit" to the UK you intend to spend 6 months you'd better have a damn good reason for doing so.
BTW, the "until" was intended to be deleted and not underlined.
Not really, although some are confused by the W signal which should only mean someone is warned they are being admitted without a mandatory visa. Some IOs think they can use it when they have told the passneger they must not come back for 6 moths after their Code5N runs out.paulp wrote:Are there groups of IOs who use different signals? Frontier mole mentionned "old school" trained?