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Could you say exactly what you mean by a "2 year indefinite leave to remain" visa?MMmm wrote:I have a Greek national partner, I am a Japanese female, we both reside in London and are not married.. We applied for and received our 2 year indefinite leave to remain (De Facto visa )which is soon coming to an end, we want to apply for my indefinite leave to remain, could someone please confirm that we do need to submit the SET(M) application form.
Two points about that .... if you really had ILR now, well it would not be limited to 2 years! What you have now is a time-limited visa ... not ILR.We applied for and received our 2 year indefinite leave to remain (De Facto visa )
JohnJohn wrote: Two points about that .... if you really had ILR now, well it would not be limited to 2 years! What you have now is a time-limited visa ... not ILR.
Sorry! I made a mistake. It's a time-limited visa( 2years)Two points about that .... if you really had ILR now, well it would not be limited to 2 years! What you have now is a time-limited visa ... not ILR.
I think Named OISC advisors uses the term De Facto visa for unmarried partner visa. When I used their service 2years ago they told me that my visa is called ' De Facto visa'...?!?!Secondly, the term de facto visa is not used in the UK. What you have appears to be an Unmarried Partner Visa. Is that correct?[/quote
My Greek partner has got a resident permit card. ( he had to apply this in order to apply my unmarried pertner visa)But even he doesn't have the resident permit card he can stay in the UK permanently as he is European.How do you think she obtained a visa under the Immigration Rules if the partner was Greek and presumably not also a British citizen or permanent resident?