kirkerj wrote: ↑Fri Nov 03, 2017 4:46 pm
The guy I used was good, we use him for our UHNW clients at work. He said documents about salary etc are only required for those who are self employed or applying under an EEA treaty and to send them in would confuse the easily confused processing team. I trust him-0he did my ILR and highly skilled migrant visa apps and renewal for me. My employer has not changed.
Anyway I emailed them last week asking if they needed anything further and explaining mail was dodgy at my apartment block. They emailed back saying nothing further was required from me, they had all they needed so I didn't need to send all that in.
There are about 10 people at my work who have applied for citizneship in the last year and none sent in payslips etc and all got approved. The times varied from 2-5 months though.
But it's not about the requirement, it's about playing the game. You have to look good, trustworthy, someone who is transparent and has nothing to hide. Comfortable with disclosing details. Perception is everything.
I didn't include payslips, there was no need for that much detail, but I included my finances because I could not be sure how biased the Home Office were when it came to earnings. I know they are biased for non-EU citizen visa applications so there is every reason to believe that it's something they look at.
My solicitor wanted me to prove for example how I financed myself when I was on study leave for a year, even though it's not required.
You have to try to cover any angle they look at because it's a lottery. Some of your colleagues were unlucky with a caseworker even though they had a good application, others were lucky with a not so good application. the whole point though is that when it comes to bureaucracy, you have to cover all angles because you just can't be sure.
So I honestly can't fathom why people just won't include stuff, it takes like 2 weeks to get hold of all the paperwork and you save on the anxiety because you know you have done your best.