- FAQ
- Login
- Register
- Call Workpermit.com for a paid service +44 (0)344-991-9222
ESC
Welcome to immigrationboards.com!
Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, Administrator
IMHO, then the director is the only one who can sign your letter.help_me_please wrote:My accountant is a firm whose "director" is registered with a institute from the list mentioned by border agency.
If you need, in line with what is stated in the policy guidance, any documentary evidence(s) issued by a certified accountant, then you have no other option.help_me_please wrote:Thanks for your reply sushdmehta!
My accountant is a bit fussy on this issue, so another alternative for me now is to give P60(or HMRC earnings statement) and personal bank statements (fortunately the tax year is in my 15 prev months). They show earnings enough to get me the required points.
But P60 (or HMRC earnings statement) has Gross Pay and PAYE on it (no employee NIC payments)
Whereas the bank statements will total to the Gross Pay minus PAYE minus NIC. Does UKBA accept this NIC gap?
(I joined my accountant services midway through the tax year and hence initial salary slips were generated by myself. though these are genuine and all the tax and NIC for initial slips is also paid, I am not sure UKBA will accept something generated by myself)
So for any registered body you need to have a practicing certificate?bobby80gh wrote:The person who signs the letter should have ACCA practising certificate. If he does not have ACCA practising certificate then legally he can not sign the accountant letter. Been an ACCA member is not enough to act for the public like signing letters. The good thing is the home office may not be aware of this so you might be fine if even the person who signed the letter does not have a practicing certificate.
Which category does your accountant belong to? And which supervisory body is he a member of? What does the membership certificate state?Tier 1 (General) policy guidance wrote:the accountant must be either a fully qualified chartered accountant or a certified accountant who is a member of a registered body.
If no certificate held against the ACCA member then he/she is not athorised to engage in the public practice. If he/she is giving you such service then it is against the professional ethics and ACCA rules.msathish wrote:Hi,
I am shortly applying for Tier1 first renewal with fulltime employment and self employment salary accounted in. My accountant has given me the letter but has not mentioned her accountant registration no in the document. When asked for, I get a response that none before asked for and thats confidential but if UKBA needs to cross check, the accountant has offered to reveal the no. to them.
when I checked the membership of the accountant on acca website https://www.acca-business.org/dom/, I could find the name of accountant and the admission year but against certificate held, it has nothing mentioned. Can someone tell me if this is sufficient? will this info on acca website be considered as an valid data for UKBA to confirm the accountant.
Per UKBA document, its mentioned that only members of ACCA/ other Accountant org should give the accountant statement.
Can someone explain if there is a risk in using this letter?
Regards,
Sathish.