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basicdiagrams wrote: ↑Tue Jun 28, 2022 12:22 pmHi everyone. A quick background info before my questions.
I registered as a British citizen (UKF route) in 2019 and shortly after I moved to the UK as I received scholarship for PhD degree, which I am to finish by the end of this year. I have never been employed in the UK for this reason.
I am in a long term relationship with my girlfriend (9+ years) during which we lived together in our home country in Europe (although we do not have any official documents to confirm that we lived at the same address as all bills were in my name), and separately (she is on her PhD in Ireland), and we visit eachother frequently in the UK and Ireland. We plan to get married in August (in our home country) and have decided to settle in the UK.
So, she would need to apply for a Family visa to join me in the UK. As I understand, for me to be eligible sponsor, I would need to have been working for at least 6 months and earning 18,600 GBP per year. Does that necessarely means she would not be able to apply before these 6 months of employment have lapsed or is there a way to shorten this period (e.g. declaring savings instead of salary)? If you have savings of £62,500 that's held for at least 6months you can apply immediately.
And finally, I wasn't able to find the answer to this question - my girlfriend would be applying for the Family visa in our home country. However, she currently has a 2-year UK Visitor visa. Would she be able to enter the UK (and stay here for short periods) with this Visitor visa while her Family visa is being processed or is that not allowed? Mine was applying for, getting visitor visa and visiting the UK while appeal was in progress. On the other hand it has happened before for person who retained their passport and visited UK while application was in process, its not so much clear if entry is normally allowed or based on luck.
Thanks
A marriage certificate isn't all that is required. It's a major requirement for spouse visa, but it also has to be backed by what I call the "B Team". Evidence that your relationship is true and subsisting. Phone logs, pictures taken at various times. Tickets or entry stamps showing that you've been seeing each other frequently. The list is based on what you can find and present to show you're in constant contact with your spouse.basicdiagrams wrote: ↑Wed Aug 10, 2022 2:43 pmThanks for the reply.
Also, the gov.uk info page about Spouse visa states that the applicant needs to "be able to prove one of the following:
So this means if she submits our marriage certificate that would be sufficient evidence for the Family visa in this case? I'm afraid we don't have any bills to prove we lived together at the same address as we were not officially registered (for utility bills etc). Don't know if that would present a problem for the application.
- you’re in a civil partnership or marriage that’s recognised in the UK
- you’ve been living together in a relationship for at least 2 years when you apply
- you are a fiancé, fiancée or proposed civil partner and will marry or enter into a civil partnership in the UK within 6 months of arriving"
Many thanks
If you don't have all that, it's not the end of the world. Sort out the financials as advised by AmazonianX, then back it up with one utility bill to show residence. Then the support docs you have.basicdiagrams wrote: ↑Thu Aug 11, 2022 1:43 pmThanks, Ticktack, we have loads of those informal ones.
The 'official' ones (like utility bills and bank accounts) are the ones we might have some issues with, as we haven't got any of those, despite being in a 10 year relationship.
More correctly, you get the right to request an administrative review. Appeals are/were a different process altogether.
Maybe it's changed now. My bad. But I know for a fact, that upon spouse visa being rejected, you get a right of appeal.secret.simon wrote: ↑Thu Aug 11, 2022 5:04 pmMore correctly, you get the right to request an administrative review. Appeals are/were a different process altogether.
Words have meanings and consequences. You should weigh them carefully![]()
Hi, a quick update if anyone else is following. I have been advised by several (successful) applicants that the marriage certificates and wedding photos was everything that was needed for successful applications, so there was no need for official documents like proof of address and such, in case you are married. Which is great news and actually reflects what is written on the gov.uk websiteTicktack wrote: ↑Wed Aug 10, 2022 3:06 pmA marriage certificate isn't all that is required. It's a major requirement for spouse visa, but it also has to be backed by what I call the "B Team". Evidence that your relationship is true and subsisting. Phone logs, pictures taken at various times. Tickets or entry stamps showing that you've been seeing each other frequently. The list is based on what you can find and present to show you're in constant contact with your spouse.basicdiagrams wrote: ↑Wed Aug 10, 2022 2:43 pmThanks for the reply.
Also, the gov.uk info page about Spouse visa states that the applicant needs to "be able to prove one of the following:
So this means if she submits our marriage certificate that would be sufficient evidence for the Family visa in this case? I'm afraid we don't have any bills to prove we lived together at the same address as we were not officially registered (for utility bills etc). Don't know if that would present a problem for the application.
- you’re in a civil partnership or marriage that’s recognised in the UK
- you’ve been living together in a relationship for at least 2 years when you apply
- you are a fiancé, fiancée or proposed civil partner and will marry or enter into a civil partnership in the UK within 6 months of arriving"
Many thanks
Congratulations on your successful application.basicdiagrams wrote: ↑Wed Aug 31, 2022 7:16 pmHi, a quick update if anyone else is following. I have been advised by several (successful) applicants that the marriage certificates and wedding photos was everything that was needed for successful applications, so there was no need for official documents like proof of address and such, in case you are married. Which is great news and actually reflects what is written on the gov.uk websiteTicktack wrote: ↑Wed Aug 10, 2022 3:06 pmA marriage certificate isn't all that is required. It's a major requirement for spouse visa, but it also has to be backed by what I call the "B Team". Evidence that your relationship is true and subsisting. Phone logs, pictures taken at various times. Tickets or entry stamps showing that you've been seeing each other frequently. The list is based on what you can find and present to show you're in constant contact with your spouse.basicdiagrams wrote: ↑Wed Aug 10, 2022 2:43 pmThanks for the reply.
Also, the gov.uk info page about Spouse visa states that the applicant needs to "be able to prove one of the following:
So this means if she submits our marriage certificate that would be sufficient evidence for the Family visa in this case? I'm afraid we don't have any bills to prove we lived together at the same address as we were not officially registered (for utility bills etc). Don't know if that would present a problem for the application.
- you’re in a civil partnership or marriage that’s recognised in the UK
- you’ve been living together in a relationship for at least 2 years when you apply
- you are a fiancé, fiancée or proposed civil partner and will marry or enter into a civil partnership in the UK within 6 months of arriving"
Many thanks![]()