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Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
He would have to go back to his home country for EC anyways.....Cassie9 wrote:One point is that I believe it is possible for you to marry your boyfriend if you get married in an Anglican church. I think that is one way you can marry without needing further home office paperwork. I know you dont really want to marry at the moment but this would give him status as your husband and you could then apply for a right for him to remain.
It may not be a fake NI he is using. Up until recently...like the past year or two...there were little to no checks made on people's immigration status when applying for a NI card. So, some overstayers or illegal entrants actually did/do have genuine NI cards and are paying taxes and NI contributions.Mr Rusty wrote:Cassie9 wrote:Hi,
If he is paying UK taxes, surely he must have some status here because without it, he would not have a national insurance number etc.,
You must be joking!!!! Fraudulent use of someone else's number, or simply supplying a bogus number is one of the easiest scams in the world. There seems to be no check on the relationship between a National Insurance number and contributions made against it.
Apparently, temporary national insurance numbers are no longer accepted by HMRC.may101 wrote:sorry my mistake- i meant a temp national insurance number!
HMRC wrote:Use the correct National Insurance number
The HM Revenue & Customs will no longer accept 'temporary' National Insurance numbers, for example TN220157M for a male born on 22 January 1957. This applies no matter which method you use to submit your forms and returns (for example paper, online) so in all cases you should try to obtain the correct National Insurance number.
This is true in theory but in practice it's easy - it's what my gf did about two years ago. Employers accept it cos it look like a NINO and the tax folks are so stuck in their ways they prolly don't even query it.paulp wrote:Apparently, temporary national insurance numbers are no longer accepted by HMRC.may101 wrote:sorry my mistake- i meant a temp national insurance number!
HMRC wrote:Use the correct National Insurance number
The HM Revenue & Customs will no longer accept 'temporary' National Insurance numbers, for example TN220157M for a male born on 22 January 1957. This applies no matter which method you use to submit your forms and returns (for example paper, online) so in all cases you should try to obtain the correct National Insurance number.
Had they started cracking down on temp NIs when your gf did it two years ago? A mate went to the bank where he had to put his NI on one of the HMRC forms. The bank manager was adamant that HMRC would just reject the form outright if he used a temp NI as that's what happened before. That's another story in itself though.Wanderer wrote:This is true in theory but in practice it's easy - it's what my gf did about two years ago. Employers accept it cos it look like a NINO and the tax folks are so stuck in their ways they prolly don't even query it.
Then u get a letter asking u to go in to get a proper NINO so they can marry up ur contributions.