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No, you are right, that is not the correct answer at all. Unfortunately, it is not the first time jagait has given questionable advice here. The applicant's intentions do not matter, only the period an applicant legally and continuosly stayed in the UK. As cricinfo correctly said, time on a student visa does count towards it. The arrival date is the date the applicant first set foot on British soil (excluding shorter visits prior to your current long-term stay).cricinfo wrote:Not sure if this is the right answer as you can count the time you lived on student visa towards your citizenship qualifying period so i think this date has to be when you came in UKjagait wrote:HSMP start date as that's the date you would have the intent to stay in UK on a long term basis.
Hang on, doesn't the guidance notes state that this date should be the date you first arrived with a view to stay long term and student visa is always granted ( I remember mine in 2004 ) on the assumption that you will return to your home country at the end of the stay and is not a settlement route.Gyfrinachgar wrote:No, you are right, that is not the correct answer at all. Unfortunately, it is not the first time jagait has given questionable advice here. The applicant's intentions do not matter, only the period an applicant legally and continuosly stayed in the UK. As cricinfo correctly said, time on a student visa does count towards it. The arrival date is the date the applicant first set foot on British soil (excluding shorter visits prior to your current long-term stay).cricinfo wrote:Not sure if this is the right answer as you can count the time you lived on student visa towards your citizenship qualifying period so i think this date has to be when you came in UKjagait wrote:HSMP start date as that's the date you would have the intent to stay in UK on a long term basis.
Since the introduction of Tier 4, there has been a requirement that prevents students on courses below degree level from being able to stay in the UK for longer than three years. There is presently nothing to prevent those studying at or above degree level from extending their stay indefinitely. Most students should therefore not be affected by this. In any case, intentions cannot be meassured or validated. Fact is that as long as an applicant legally stayed in the UK, HO will consider that period for naturalisation.jagait wrote:Hang on, doesn't the guidance notes state that this date should be the date you first arrived with a view to stay long term and student visa is always granted ( I remember mine in 2004 ) on the assumption that you will return to your home country at the end of the stay and is not a settlement route.
I stand corrected.Gyfrinachgar wrote:Since the introduction of Tier 4, there has been a requirement that prevents students on courses below degree level from being able to stay in the UK for longer than three years. There is presently nothing to prevent those studying at or above degree level from extending their stay indefinitely. Most students should therefore not be affected by this. In any case, intentions cannot be meassured or validated. Fact is that as long as an applicant legally stayed in the UK, HO will consider that period for naturalisation.jagait wrote:Hang on, doesn't the guidance notes state that this date should be the date you first arrived with a view to stay long term and student visa is always granted ( I remember mine in 2004 ) on the assumption that you will return to your home country at the end of the stay and is not a settlement route.