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Eco will not just calculate and put you in any category. You are to show the category you fall into by the things you fill in the form and evidence you will provide in support of your application.sxm1256 wrote: ↑Sun Oct 18, 2020 11:50 pmI am employed in the UK - non-salaried work, paid per hours worked (40 hours a week.)
My contract says my salary is £19,500 over 52weeks. This equates to £375 a week.
The question is, if I work 6 months, is this 24 weeks (4 weeks x6months) or is it half of 52, so 26 weeks?
If it is 6 months as 24 weeks, I will not meet the requirements (£375 x 24weeks = £9000) as it becomes £18,000 yearly
However, as 26 weeks (£374 x 26= £9750) I will meet the requirements as it is my contracted salary £19,500.
Will ECO consider my contract to fulfil the requirement or will they calculate however they want and put me into any category?
Many thanks.
"The onus is on the applicant to demonstrate the financial requirement is met in theirsxm1256 wrote: ↑Sun Oct 18, 2020 11:50 pmI am employed in the UK - non-salaried work, paid per hours worked (40 hours a week.)
My contract says my salary is £19,500 over 52weeks. This equates to £375 a week.
The question is, if I work 6 months, is this 24 weeks (4 weeks x6months) or is it half of 52, so 26 weeks?
If it is 6 months as 24 weeks, I will not meet the requirements (£375 x 24weeks = £9000) as it becomes £18,000 yearly
However, as 26 weeks (£374 x 26= £9750) I will meet the requirements as it is my contracted salary £19,500.
Will ECO consider my contract to fulfil the requirement or will they calculate however they want and put me into any category?
Many thanks.
With a base salary and well defined contractual hours, one can't be a none-salaried person unless starts undertaking overtime which will only be considered as none-salaried.
sxm1256 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:56 am
Hi, my contract states “pro-rota,” salary so the amount each month varies according to hours worked. Will this be classes as non-salaried?
Only that proportion of the salaried income will be none-salaried which if will tend to vary which usually happens in case of undertaking overtime, receiving bonus/commission income. For this purpose following is the guidance on page 27.sxm1256 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:56 am
Hi, my contract states “pro-rota,” salary so the amount each month varies according to hours worked. Will this be classes as non-salaried?
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source= ... a8VCfDfJBUOvertime, payments to cover travel time (for example, for a care worker travelling
between appointments), commission-based pay and bonuses (which can include tips
and gratuities paid via a tronc scheme registered with HMRC) will be counted as
income from employment where they have been received in the relevant period(s)
prior to the date of application. Sometimes the person will receive the same amount
of income from overtime each month; sometimes overtime payments will vary, with
different amounts (if any) each month. All overtime in salaried employment will be
calculated based on the approach to income from non-salaried employment. This will
be an annualised 6-month average for the overtime which will be added to the level
of the gross annual salary.
Another thing I’ve just realised is that my contract states that it will end in July 2020. Does the work have to be permanent or is this temporary type of contract valid? I could ask my manager to write that he is offering a permanent/part time role as a locum pharmacist after I have qualified as I am just a trainee pre-registration pharmacist at the moment. Will this be appropriate?TODMATT wrote: ↑Tue Oct 20, 2020 10:45 amsxm1256 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:56 am
Hi, my contract states “pro-rota,” salary so the amount each month varies according to hours worked. Will this be classes as non-salaried?
"Non-salaried employment includes that paid at an hourly or other rate (and the
number and/or pattern of hours required to be worked may vary) or paid an amount
which varies according to the work undertaken. Salaried employment includes that
paid at a minimum fixed rate (usually annual) which is usually subject to a
contractual minimum number of hours to be worked."
See page 18
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... gov-uk.pdf
Another issue is that I’m a pre-reg trainee, if I fail my exam in the summer, I won’t be able to work as a pharmacist. The HO could argue that I won’t have a job by the end of this year so is this job even reliable for me to apply for a spouse visa?
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.u ... gov-uk.pdf page 27Salaried and non-salaried employment – general
requirements
Employment can be full-time or part-time.
Employment can be permanent, a fixed-term contract or with an agency.
NO. UKVI only cares what you are earning to meet the financial threshold.
Except your employer, nobody can tell
totally depend on you.
That probably due to you have joined them after their previous payday or very close to the next payday because few employers keep the wages equivalent to 1-2 weeks in deposit. Otherwise I could be an error/mistake.
If the remaining wages was later remitted to you highlight it on your account statement, address it in cover letter and employer letters.
Thanks for the advice. If I submit 2 weeks worth, that will be counted as the lowest paid month (£750) so how can I meet the requirements for a salaried job? It’s usually £1500 plus for other months. Will I be able calculate my earning based on the other full months of payslips and ignore these two weeks? I’m not too sure how to calculate from a 2 week payslip as it’s given as a months worth of work.AmazonianX wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 11:29 amIf the remaining wages was later remitted to you highlight it on your account statement, address it in cover letter and employer letters.
Thanks for the advice. If I submit 2 weeks worth, that will be counted as the lowest paid month (£750) so how can I meet the requirements for a salaried job? It’s usually £1500 plus for other months. Will I be able calculate my earning based on the other full months of payslips and ignore these two weeks? I’m not too sure how to calculate from a 2 week payslip as it’s given as a months worth of work.AmazonianX wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 11:29 amIf the remaining wages was later remitted to you highlight it on your account statement, address it in cover letter and employer letters.
It’s definitely a mistake I remember I wasn’t login into the clocking system for 2 days hence 16 hours going unpaid. Do you know how these 2 weeks will be considered when calculating salaried employment as it is really low compared to the other months. Thanks for your help
The lowest wages figure during the last 6 months is usually considered where the income is salaried. But why not you request them for issuing you the correct revised payslip of that month whilst addressing it in employer letter.sxm1256 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 12:24 pmIt’s definitely a mistake I remember I wasn’t login into the clocking system for 2 days hence 16 hours going unpaid. Do you know how these 2 weeks will be considered when calculating salaried employment as it is really low compared to the other months. Thanks for your help
I’m not sure if I’m salaried or non-salaried. Do I get to opt for non-salaried category? It will be so much easier if I could average the earning over the 6 months.seagul wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 1:08 pmThe lowest wages figure during the last 6 months is usually considered where the income is salaried. But why not you request them for issuing you the correct revised payslip of that month whilst addressing it in employer letter.sxm1256 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 12:24 pmIt’s definitely a mistake I remember I wasn’t login into the clocking system for 2 days hence 16 hours going unpaid. Do you know how these 2 weeks will be considered when calculating salaried employment as it is really low compared to the other months. Thanks for your help
sxm1256 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 2:23 pmI’m not sure if I’m salaried or non-salaried. Do I get to opt for non-salaried category? It will be so much easier if I could average the earning over the 6 months.seagul wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 1:08 pmThe lowest wages figure during the last 6 months is usually considered where the income is salaried. But why not you request them for issuing you the correct revised payslip of that month whilst addressing it in employer letter.sxm1256 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 12:24 pmIt’s definitely a mistake I remember I wasn’t login into the clocking system for 2 days hence 16 hours going unpaid. Do you know how these 2 weeks will be considered when calculating salaried employment as it is really low compared to the other months. Thanks for your help
My pay varies each month, I am paid hourly and contracted in for 40 hours a week but I can do overtime. so is it possible to opt for non-salaried this and it being the correct way to do it? Or am I still salaried?
This way I can just add on the 2 weeks that I had in July (£750) rather than having to use it as the “lowest paid” month for the salaries category. I hope this makes sense
Your contractual/base salary as above wouldn't fall under none-salaried but only your overtime will. Also remember that shortfall can also be covered through cash savings & other source of income.
seagul wrote: ↑Tue Oct 20, 2020 1:00 pmFor this purpose following is the guidance on page 27.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source= ... a8VCfDfJBUOvertime, payments to cover travel time (for example, for a care worker travelling
between appointments), commission-based pay and bonuses (which can include tips
and gratuities paid via a tronc scheme registered with HMRC) will be counted as
income from employment where they have been received in the relevant period(s)
prior to the date of application. Sometimes the person will receive the same amount
of income from overtime each month; sometimes overtime payments will vary, with
different amounts (if any) each month. All overtime in salaried employment will be
calculated based on the approach to income from non-salaried employment. This will
be an annualised 6-month average for the overtime which will be added to the level
of the gross annual salary.
Thanks. Could you just clarify this for me, let me know if anything is unclear;seagul wrote: ↑Tue Oct 27, 2020 5:18 pmseagul wrote: ↑Tue Oct 20, 2020 1:00 pmFor this purpose following is the guidance on page 27.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source= ... a8VCfDfJBUOvertime, payments to cover travel time (for example, for a care worker travelling
between appointments), commission-based pay and bonuses (which can include tips
and gratuities paid via a tronc scheme registered with HMRC) will be counted as
income from employment where they have been received in the relevant period(s)
prior to the date of application. Sometimes the person will receive the same amount
of income from overtime each month; sometimes overtime payments will vary, with
different amounts (if any) each month. All overtime in salaried employment will be
calculated based on the approach to income from non-salaried employment. This will
be an annualised 6-month average for the overtime which will be added to the level
of the gross annual salary.