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ILR in 2018
Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2017 6:54 pm
by wtmlive
Every year I change sponsors and go to a new place. I am planning on doing the same this year in September.
The new visa that i get will expire most probably by September or early October 2018.
I will complete 5 years of continuous stay on Tier 2 by 22nd October 2018. (My ILR Date).
Considering that would I have to apply for a new job and a CoS as well as a Tier 2 application to be made just for to be entitled to work for a period of a month or so?
I will have to change sponsors again from September 2018 anyway.
my second question is regarding the sponsorship that I need to provide for ILR. Is it a Certificate of sponsorship or a mere letter stating that I am still required for a job that meets the salary threshold?
Any help is appreciated as I am in this on my own.
Regards.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2017 10:17 pm
by CR001
Why do you 'have to' change sponsors every year and why do you 'have to' change sponsors in September 2018??
What type of work do you do that requires a change in sponsor every year? Are you contracting?
It is a letter you need not a CoS.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Thu Feb 16, 2017 1:18 pm
by ouflak1
wtmlive wrote:Every year I change sponsors and go to a new place. I am planning on doing the same this year in September.
The new visa that i get will expire most probably by September or early October 2018.
I will complete 5 years of continuous stay on Tier 2 by 22nd October 2018. (My ILR Date).
Considering that would I have to apply for a new job and a CoS as well as a Tier 2 application to be made just for to be entitled to work for a period of a month or so?
I will have to change sponsors again from September 2018 anyway.
This kind of of instability may very well disqualify you for ILR under the Tier 2 route. What kind of work it it? Seems suspiciously not quite under the umbrella of Tier 2.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Thu Feb 16, 2017 4:18 pm
by iworker
ouflak1 wrote:wtmlive wrote:Every year I change sponsors and go to a new place. I am planning on doing the same this year in September.
The new visa that i get will expire most probably by September or early October 2018.
I will complete 5 years of continuous stay on Tier 2 by 22nd October 2018. (My ILR Date).
Considering that would I have to apply for a new job and a CoS as well as a Tier 2 application to be made just for to be entitled to work for a period of a month or so?
I will have to change sponsors again from September 2018 anyway.
This kind of of instability may very well disqualify you for ILR under the Tier 2 route. What kind of work it it? Seems suspiciously not quite under the umbrella of Tier 2.
The above is totally wrong and not based on fact.
All hospital doctors have to renew visa every year.
Some researchers have to renew every
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Thu Feb 16, 2017 10:52 pm
by wtmlive
I am an NHS doctor and my contracts last 6 months or 1 year normally. Even British doctors have to move jobs every year as they go to new rotations. I am not in an official training programme so I just re-apply for a job every year.
I was hoping to move to a new job in October 2018 with my ILR.
Can someone please answer the original question if they can.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Fri Feb 17, 2017 8:27 am
by CR001
You will need to extend or apply for a new visa with a new sponsor to cover the period that you are short for ILR. You will need a letter from your employer at that time to state 'you will be required for the foreseeable future....'.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Fri Feb 17, 2017 9:51 am
by iworker
I would suggest that you should not try to save money and bite the bullet to keep everything safe.
If i were u, i would the following.
Move jobs, and get new tier 2.
Once u have the new tier 2 which would be like a year long, then apply for ilr with a letter from hospital stating your current contract end date.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Fri Feb 17, 2017 6:28 pm
by ouflak1
iworker wrote:ouflak1 wrote:wtmlive wrote:Every year I change sponsors and go to a new place. I am planning on doing the same this year in September.
The new visa that i get will expire most probably by September or early October 2018.
I will complete 5 years of continuous stay on Tier 2 by 22nd October 2018. (My ILR Date).
Considering that would I have to apply for a new job and a CoS as well as a Tier 2 application to be made just for to be entitled to work for a period of a month or so?
I will have to change sponsors again from September 2018 anyway.
This kind of of instability may very well disqualify you for ILR under the Tier 2 route. What kind of work is it? Seems suspiciously not quite under the umbrella of Tier 2.
The above is totally wrong and not based on fact.
All hospital doctors have to renew visa every year.
Some researchers have to renew every
This is why we kept asking what kind of work you do as that is a critical detail necessary for us to give you useful information. Could you post a link to the requirement for annual visa renewal by doctors working at a hospital?
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2017 3:34 pm
by wtmlive
ouflak1 wrote:iworker wrote:ouflak1 wrote:wtmlive wrote:Every year I change sponsors and go to a new place. I am planning on doing the same this year in September.
The new visa that i get will expire most probably by September or early October 2018.
I will complete 5 years of continuous stay on Tier 2 by 22nd October 2018. (My ILR Date).
Considering that would I have to apply for a new job and a CoS as well as a Tier 2 application to be made just for to be entitled to work for a period of a month or so?
I will have to change sponsors again from September 2018 anyway.
This kind of of instability may very well disqualify you for ILR under the Tier 2 route. What kind of work is it? Seems suspiciously not quite under the umbrella of Tier 2.
The above is totally wrong and not based on fact.
All hospital doctors have to renew visa every year.
Some researchers have to renew every
This is why we kept asking what kind of work you do as that is a critical detail necessary for us to give you useful information. Could you post a link to the requirement for annual visa renewal by doctors working at a hospital?
There's no "requirement" as such, however, it is the common way of doing things. I know doctors who have not changed posts since they have started (6 years in same hospital), so it's up to the individual and the sponsoring hospital to decide. I have chosen to regularly change jobs as a means of career progression.
I have managed to get my current sponsors to agree for a new three year COS, my question is now, that I would have completed the 6 year maximum visa extension by October 2019, the new COS will be valid until 2020. Will the home office simply extend my visa until the date mentioned on the COS or only extend it until the last possible date of 2019, when I am due to complete 6 years? Or will they reject the new COS and I should discuss with my sponsors to reduce to sponsoring date to 2 years?
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2017 5:37 pm
by paradoxical
Once you complete 5 years on Tier 2, you can apply for ILR. Actually you can apply up to 28 days earlier than completing 5 years on Tier 2. At that point, you will require a letter from your current employer stating that you are required for the foreseeable future. It doesn''t really matter as to what was the expiry date of your COS. What is key here is the letter from your current employer where they state that you are required for the foreseeable future.
Anyone who have successfully received ILR based on their tier 2 would always have had their job end date in their CoS much sooner (mostly 1 year maximum at the time of application) as one can't get it for more than 6 years.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Sun Jul 30, 2017 6:42 pm
by wtmlive
paradoxical wrote:Once you complete 5 years on Tier 2, you can apply for ILR. Actually you can apply up to 28 days earlier than completing 5 years on Tier 2. At that point, you will require a letter from your current employer stating that you are required for the foreseeable future. It doesn''t really matter as to what was the expiry date of your COS. What is key here is the letter from your current employer where they state that you are required for the foreseeable future.
Anyone who have successfully received ILR based on their tier 2 would always have had their job end date in their CoS much sooner (mostly 1 year maximum at the time of application) as one can't get it for more than 6 years.
My ILR Date is October 2018, I am getting a new CoS for 3 years issued to me in August, my question is should I ask my sponsors to reduce the extent of the cos so I will not exceed 6 years in total or let them issue me one for 3 years and the home office can sort out the dates when I apply for the extension , presuming they would only issue me until the 6 years on Tier 2 complete?
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2017 10:22 am
by paradoxical
My ILR Date is October 2018, I am getting a new CoS for 3 years issued to me in August, my question is should I ask my sponsors to reduce the extent of the cos so I will not exceed 6 years in total or let them issue me one for 3 years and the home office can sort out the dates when I apply for the extension , presuming they would only issue me until the 6 years on Tier 2 complete?
The Home Office will certainly give you Tier 2 to get it to a maximum of 6 years only. I would suggest sorting the date with your employer and asking them to issue you COS so that the end date is the 6 year anniversary of your Tier 2. During application, you will then also end up paying slightly less health surcharge (if that matters).
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2017 12:30 pm
by iworker
Doesnt matter. Let them issue u a cos for 3 years.
your visa will be adjusted accordingly automatically.
Dont get into confusions, let it be a 3 years cos.
Re: ILR in 2018
Posted: Mon Jul 31, 2017 3:02 pm
by haseeb999
I am also a nhs doctor ,you can stable non training jobs easily.