Post
by John » Thu Sep 14, 2006 4:46 pm
Chris, it certainly does help.
As soon as the two of you start living together in the UK, you (and certainly not your fiancée) will be entitled to claim Child Benefit for the two children. It matters not that your fiancée and the two children will all have visas saying "No recourse to Public Funds" ... none of the three of them will be claiming ... you will be ... and you are totally entitled to claim.
Child Benefit is a one-claimant benefit. However you also mention Tax Credits, and in respect of a couple living together, a claim for Tax Credits must be made jointly. However, in your circumstances this is not a problem. Some "small print" buried in the Tax Credits legislation comes to your rescue.
That is, reg. 3(2), Tax Credits (Immigration) Regulations 2003 says that where the couple consist of one person who is not subject to immigration control (you) and one person who is subject to immigration control (your fiancée) then for Tax Credits purposes only, both of you are treated as not being subject to immigration control. Hence a claim is totally OK. This is backed up by para 6B of the Immigration Rules.
Hope this helps. Just for the record, another bit of "small print", the Tax Credits (Residence) Regulations 2003, stops any claim for Tax Credits until the three of them are actually living in the UK.
One side-effect of the Tax Credits claim! The application form asks for the National Insurance number ("NINO") of each applicant. Your fiancée does not have a NINO? If that is the case, it will provoke the procedure to get her a NINO. Whilst this might delay the start of the Tax Credits payments, the backlog will be paid after the NINO is issued and the Tax Credits application processed.
Finally, 3 settlement visa applications at about £260 each! Or rather the Canadian Dollar rough equivalent of that! Ouch!
John