- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator
Are you intending to apply for a fiance visa and then marry in the UK within 6 months, for your wife to then apply for limited leave to remain on a spouse visa ?whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 10:21 pmHello,
I have questions regarding the UK fiancé visa which I would be grateful for some guidance on.
1. Can my fiancé use an IELTS Academic for UKVI test to show proof of her English language competency even if she doesn't attain the level required for UK academic study but does score above A1?
2. One of the required documents is 'one proof of British citizenship for the sponsor (such as a passport or UK citizenship certificate).' Does this mean that my fiancé needs to include my original passport with her application?
3. Does my fiancé need to include evidence of intent to return to her country of origin?
Many thanks in advance for any assistance rendered.
Hi, we are intending to apply for a fiance visa to subsequently marry in the UK within 6 months, with the aim to eventually apply for limited leave to remain on a spouse visa. Thank you.Casa wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 10:34 pmAre you intending to apply for a fiance visa and then marry in the UK within 6 months, for your wife to then apply for limited leave to remain on a spouse visa ?whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 10:21 pmHello,
I have questions regarding the UK fiancé visa which I would be grateful for some guidance on.
1. Can my fiancé use an IELTS Academic for UKVI test to show proof of her English language competency even if she doesn't attain the level required for UK academic study but does score above A1?
2. One of the required documents is 'one proof of British citizenship for the sponsor (such as a passport or UK citizenship certificate).' Does this mean that my fiancé needs to include my original passport with her application?
3. Does my fiancé need to include evidence of intent to return to her country of origin?
Many thanks in advance for any assistance rendered.
OR
A marriage visitor visa, where your wife will return to her home country once the marriage has taken place ?
whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Sep 13, 2023 10:20 amHi, we are intending to apply for a fiance visa to subsequently marry in the UK within 6 months, with the aim to eventually apply for limited leave to remain on a spouse visa. Thank you.Casa wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 10:34 pmAre you intending to apply for a fiance visa and then marry in the UK within 6 months, for your wife to then apply for limited leave to remain on a spouse visa ?whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 10:21 pmHello,
I have questions regarding the UK fiancé visa which I would be grateful for some guidance on.
1. Can my fiancé use an IELTS Academic for UKVI test to show proof of her English language competency even if she doesn't attain the level required for UK academic study but does score above A1? Best is not to use IELTS Academics but the recommended UKVI Lifeskills test. Requirement is for A1 however if she can pass it at Level B1 this can save time and money later as she can use same one till getting BC years down the line.
2. One of the required documents is 'one proof of British citizenship for the sponsor (such as a passport or UK citizenship certificate).' Does this mean that my fiancé needs to include my original passport with her application? Applications are done online now so an uploaded scanned copy of documents is all that is required .
3. Does my fiancé need to include evidence of intent to return to her country of origin? No
Many thanks in advance for any assistance rendered.
OR
A marriage visitor visa, where your wife will return to her home country once the marriage has taken place ?
Thank you, AmazonianX for your informative answers.AmazonianX wrote: ↑Wed Sep 13, 2023 7:10 pmwhiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Sep 13, 2023 10:20 amHi, we are intending to apply for a fiance visa to subsequently marry in the UK within 6 months, with the aim to eventually apply for limited leave to remain on a spouse visa. Thank you.Casa wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 10:34 pmAre you intending to apply for a fiance visa and then marry in the UK within 6 months, for your wife to then apply for limited leave to remain on a spouse visa ?whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 10:21 pmHello,
I have questions regarding the UK fiancé visa which I would be grateful for some guidance on.
1. Can my fiancé use an IELTS Academic for UKVI test to show proof of her English language competency even if she doesn't attain the level required for UK academic study but does score above A1? Best is not to use IELTS Academics but the recommended UKVI Lifeskills test. Requirement is for A1 however if she can pass it at Level B1 this can save time and money later as she can use same one till getting BC years down the line.
2. One of the required documents is 'one proof of British citizenship for the sponsor (such as a passport or UK citizenship certificate).' Does this mean that my fiancé needs to include my original passport with her application? Applications are done online now so an uploaded scanned copy of documents is all that is required .
3. Does my fiancé need to include evidence of intent to return to her country of origin? No
Many thanks in advance for any assistance rendered.
OR
A marriage visitor visa, where your wife will return to her home country once the marriage has taken place ?
Many thanks for that. So, practically, the only evidence that one can possibly show of intent to marry in order to meet the requirements for a fiancé visa would be correspondence regarding wedding planning with, e.g. venues, registry offices, bridal wear shops, jewellers, etc?CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 9:29 amIf applying for a fiance visa, you need evidence of wedding prep enquiries etc in the uk.
A ceremony in her home country is irrelevant as that would indicate you will marry abroad, which is not the point of a uk fiance visa as you would then already be married.
You also cannot book a slot with the Registry in the uk until your fiance is in the uk as you both need to attend in person and she needs to provide proof of her visa etc
Correct yes.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 9:43 amMany thanks for that. So, practically, the only evidence that one can possibly show of intent to marry in order to meet the requirements for a fiancé visa would be correspondence regarding wedding planning with, e.g. venues, registry offices, bridal wear shops, jewellers, etc?CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 9:29 amIf applying for a fiance visa, you need evidence of wedding prep enquiries etc in the uk.
A ceremony in her home country is irrelevant as that would indicate you will marry abroad, which is not the point of a uk fiance visa as you would then already be married.
You also cannot book a slot with the Registry in the uk until your fiance is in the uk as you both need to attend in person and she needs to provide proof of her visa etc
Many thanks for clarifying that.CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 10:16 amCorrect yes.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 9:43 amMany thanks for that. So, practically, the only evidence that one can possibly show of intent to marry in order to meet the requirements for a fiancé visa would be correspondence regarding wedding planning with, e.g. venues, registry offices, bridal wear shops, jewellers, etc?CR001 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 14, 2023 9:29 amIf applying for a fiance visa, you need evidence of wedding prep enquiries etc in the uk.
A ceremony in her home country is irrelevant as that would indicate you will marry abroad, which is not the point of a uk fiance visa as you would then already be married.
You also cannot book a slot with the Registry in the uk until your fiance is in the uk as you both need to attend in person and she needs to provide proof of her visa etc
They are indeed.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Dec 20, 2023 8:53 pmApparently, Russian citizens are permitted to hold two external passports.
Why would it be? People change passports throughout their lives. The question, though, is if the correct passport number is entered in the form - that might cause a discrepancy.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Dec 20, 2023 8:53 pmIf she were to submit a second external passport for the fiancé visa application will the application automatically be refused?
If you're worried about that, you could upload a copy of her passport online, but I honestly think you're overthinking.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Dec 20, 2023 8:53 pmFurthermore, the second passport would not contain any of the stamps from previous travel declared on her application form.
That would be a complete waste of a second passport then if you can't use it, wouldn't it?whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Thu Dec 21, 2023 12:45 amdoes it mean that no visas AT ALL can be applied for with EITHER passport if a Russian citizen chooses to have two external passports?
Yep, that should work. But add the recent payslip to the mix and explain why in a cover letter. They would be able to work out details.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 8:32 amHello, all. Happy New Year.
I have the following question about payslips as evidence for a UK fiancé visa please:
Firstly, I am paid non-salaried every two weeks. Because my bank statements are generated on the 28th of every month my payslip for 2 January 2024 will not appear on any bank statement until 28 January. If I apply on 7 January 2024 will it be sufficient to show payslips from the six-month period 20 June 2023 - 19 December 2023 even though I have one more recent payslip (02 January 2024)?
Many thanks in advance.
Hmm, I've just rechecked my payslips and, as I've been working essentially part-time during the last six months in a non-salaried role with variable monthly pay (in order to spend time abroad with my fiancée), I'm very close to the minimum £18,600 required.Ticktack wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 9:28 amYep, that should work. But add the recent payslip to the mix and explain why in a cover letter. They would be able to work out details.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 8:32 amHello, all. Happy New Year.
I have the following question about payslips as evidence for a UK fiancé visa please:
Firstly, I am paid non-salaried every two weeks. Because my bank statements are generated on the 28th of every month my payslip for 2 January 2024 will not appear on any bank statement until 28 January. If I apply on 7 January 2024 will it be sufficient to show payslips from the six-month period 20 June 2023 - 19 December 2023 even though I have one more recent payslip (02 January 2024)?
Many thanks in advance.
***Please disregard the post above.***whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 8:50 pmHmm, I've just rechecked my payslips and, as I've been working essentially part-time during the last six months in a non-salaried role with variable monthly pay (in order to spend time abroad with my fiancée), I'm very close to the minimum £18,600 required.Ticktack wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 9:28 amYep, that should work. But add the recent payslip to the mix and explain why in a cover letter. They would be able to work out details.whiskydeltatango wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2024 8:32 amHello, all. Happy New Year.
I have the following question about payslips as evidence for a UK fiancé visa please:
Firstly, I am paid non-salaried every two weeks. Because my bank statements are generated on the 28th of every month my payslip for 2 January 2024 will not appear on any bank statement until 28 January. If I apply on 7 January 2024 will it be sufficient to show payslips from the six-month period 20 June 2023 - 19 December 2023 even though I have one more recent payslip (02 January 2024)?
Many thanks in advance.
On 19 December 2023 I was over the requirement, but on 02 January 2024 I was under the requirement. Presumably it would be extremely unwise to apply on, say, 05 January 2024 with payslips for the six-month period 20 June - 19 December. Correct?