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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... rement.pdf(Total gross income from non-salaried employment in the period prior to the date of
application for which that employment has been held) divided by the number of
months and multiplied by 12 (or by the number of weeks and multiplied by 52 where
payment is weekly, or by the number of days and multiplied by 365 where payment
is daily) = Income from non-salaried employment that can be counted towards the
financial requirement.
Again, calculate what you earned over the 20 weeks, annualise it as expalined and see if you meet the requirements of £18,600 under category Aksmasher247 wrote: ↑Mon May 13, 2024 4:37 pmMakes sense. So say in the last 6 months prior to application date, and I worked for 20 weeks total rather than 26 weeks (for instance), as long as I have earned over £9300+ and my latest payslip is issued within 28 days before applying in the last 6 months, I can apply under Category A?
I don't want to apply under catgeory B because I've earned only over £15k since last year but I've earned £10k+ in the last 6 months.
Under category A you need to have held the same source of income for 6 months or more. Under category B it could be shorter. That is the only differenceThe only difference in Category A between salaried and non-salaried employment is
how gross annual salary or employment income is calculated:
Where the person is in salaried employment – they must have been paid throughout
the period of 6 months prior to the date of application at a level of gross annual
salary which equals or exceeds the level relied upon in the application. Therefore,
the figure used towards the requirement will be the lowest level of annual salary
received during the 6-month period.
Where the person is in non-salaried employment – the level of gross annual
employment income relied upon in the application will be the annual equivalent of the
person’s average gross monthly income from non-salaried employment in the 6
months prior to the date of application (where that employment was held throughout
that period).
To calculate this annualised average for non-salaried employment in Category A the
following calculation should be used:
(Total gross income from employment held throughout the 6-month period, divided
by 6) multiplied by 12 = Income from non-salaried employment that can be counted
towards the financial requirement.
Hi. Thanks for the fast response. The solictors are family friends and 1 other said he'll offer 1 free legal advice. So I didn't have to pay any of themzimba wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 6:55 pmIt seems you have lots of money to waste on solicitors rather than reading the guide which makes things very clear. I would like you to look at page 26 which says the same thing for category A. What I quoted is about how the annualised salary needs to be calculated when you are in non-salaried employment:
Where the person is in non-salaried employment – the level of gross annual
employment income relied upon in the application will be the annual equivalent of the
person’s average gross monthly income from non-salaried employment in the 6
months prior to the date of application (where that employment was held throughout
that period).
To calculate this annualised average for non-salaried employment in Category A the
following calculation should be used:
(Total gross income from employment held throughout the 6-month period, divided
by 6) multiplied by 12 = Income from non-salaried employment that can be counted
towards the financial requirement.
The total salary is what is considered, so on a week that you do not get paid, you can assume zero. Again, category A is all about being with the same employer for more than 6 months not having to produce a specific number of payslips or whateverksmasher247 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 7:06 pmSo will 19-20 weeks payslips be fine to apply under Category A having earned over £10,000? Or do I HAVE to submit all 26 weeks payslips even on some weeks where I earned gross £0.00 (tax refunds were issued), other weeks, no payslips produced at all. I really do not want to apply under Cat B; it's scary to think what might happen if I do.
Between Jan 2024 to May 2024, 19-20 payslips produced. Total gross earned is about £10,307.94. Salary is weekly (only when I work). So its's fine to apply under Cat A using those little amount of payslips?
Yeah, I've been with both employers for well over 12 months. The example C scared me, thought that I have to have some form of income for every single week for 26 weeks even if I have a holiday or that I have to have all 26 weeks payslips even if it says £0.00 for which I don't have.zimba wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 7:12 pmThe total salary is what is considered, so on a week that you do not get paid, you can assume zero. Again, category A is all about being with the same employer for more than 6 months not having to produce a specific number of payslips or whateverksmasher247 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 7:06 pmSo will 19-20 weeks payslips be fine to apply under Category A having earned over £10,000? Or do I HAVE to submit all 26 weeks payslips even on some weeks where I earned gross £0.00 (tax refunds were issued), other weeks, no payslips produced at all. I really do not want to apply under Cat B; it's scary to think what might happen if I do.
Between Jan 2024 to May 2024, 19-20 payslips produced. Total gross earned is about £10,307.94. Salary is weekly (only when I work). So its's fine to apply under Cat A using those little amount of payslips?
By the way, forgot to mention. One of my payslips shows that I received £1000+ tax refund as net pay but gross is £300+. That's ok to use? It's already mentioned in the employment letter that any tax refunds issued are not gross income.zimba wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 7:12 pmThe total salary is what is considered, so on a week that you do not get paid, you can assume zero. Again, category A is all about being with the same employer for more than 6 months not having to produce a specific number of payslips or whateverksmasher247 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 7:06 pmSo will 19-20 weeks payslips be fine to apply under Category A having earned over £10,000? Or do I HAVE to submit all 26 weeks payslips even on some weeks where I earned gross £0.00 (tax refunds were issued), other weeks, no payslips produced at all. I really do not want to apply under Cat B; it's scary to think what might happen if I do.
Between Jan 2024 to May 2024, 19-20 payslips produced. Total gross earned is about £10,307.94. Salary is weekly (only when I work). So its's fine to apply under Cat A using those little amount of payslips?
Again, gross pay is all that matters.ksmasher247 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 8:39 pmOk gotcha. That means I can still use that payslip for the application right? Because it has gross £300 and net £1k.
One of the questions does ask:zimba wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 8:44 pmAgain, gross pay is all that matters.ksmasher247 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 8:39 pmOk gotcha. That means I can still use that payslip for the application right? Because it has gross £300 and net £1k.
No!One of the questions does ask:
"How long have you lived in the UK?"
She lived here 5 years and 1 month but back in 2022, she's been abroad to see her faily for 2 months. Should I subtract 5 years, 1 month to 4 years and 10 months?
Yeah, found out you don't do that unless she stayed over 180 days which she hasn't. I submitted everything online last night. Booked a biometric appointment too; I thought it'll be free to book but it wasn't/ Had to pay extra £143. Strange.
There is no 180 day absence issue or limit for spouse visa holders. It applies to a completely different visa category with different rules.found out you don't do that unless she stayed over 180 days which she hasn't.
Oh ok. Got it. What about the other 2 questions?