lesterburnham wrote:thanks noajthan, I gathered from others advice in this topic that submitting too much (evidence of employment, full time studies and month of self employment) might confuse worker (and cause more harm than good) rather than spoon-feed..
If I submit all evidence as you suggest, how should I point out what I think is qualifying period and avoid application being rejected due to not having Comprehensive Sickness Insurance when I was student?
As for evidence of employment, I thought p60s would contain enough info, am I wrong in that assumption? If so, should I submit all payslips?
This would be ok for last 5 years as I was paid monthly, but between 2007-2010 I was paid weekly, which would mean I would submit over 200 payslips altogether (52*3 for 2007-2010 and 12*5 for 2011-2016) - that sounds like overkill to me?
Members have reported success by including samples of payslips to complement their P60s.
The point is you want something in reserve if the caseworker chooses to disregard one particular document or other for some reason. Because they will make the decision based on what's submitted to them.
Don't give HO the Spam of 'wriggle room'! You don't want to risk one year being ignored if, say, one P60 contains some typo.
If you have some period in which you had two potential categories of qualifying activity going on (for example studying and working) then add a cogent paragraph in the
additional info section of the form;
- highlight the qualifying period and the relevant category of qualified person.
Back it up with the necessary and unimpeachable documentary supporting evidence for your strongest category.
You won't have strong evidence to submit for the studies anyway because no CSI, so simply mention it in the timeline; no need to prove it.
For example, if working and studying (but without CSI) state that you acquired PR automatically due to exercising treaty rights as a worker (qualified person) from year x to year y.
If another category followed on (for a subsequent period) then refer to that too.
Accentuate the positive!