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Welcome.erasmusdt wrote:Good day
I need some help with a visa question.
My wife, myself and kids lived in the Uk on Ancestry visas. We returned to South Africa just before our visas ended and about a year later (Oct 2012) my wife as the main visa holder returned to the UK. She is currently in full time employment in Scotland, renting a flat.
My self and the children remain in SA but wish to also go over, our main problem is that the nhs surcharge is so high. I recently proposed that we get myself a dependency visa so I could go work again and the children visitor visas. We do realise that the children wont be able to go to school in the UK and that one of us would have to return to South Africa to get them their dependency visas within the 6 months.
Do anybody forsee any problems with visitors visas being granted to to children or any other visa related problems?
TIA
And withholding children from school once they are in UK is (probably) illegal.Members of your family can’t apply in the UK as your dependant if they hold a visitor visa.
noajthan wrote:Welcome.erasmusdt wrote:Good day
I need some help with a visa question.
My wife, myself and kids lived in the Uk on Ancestry visas. We returned to South Africa just before our visas ended and about a year later (Oct 2012) my wife as the main visa holder returned to the UK. She is currently in full time employment in Scotland, renting a flat.
My self and the children remain in SA but wish to also go over, our main problem is that the nhs surcharge is so high. I recently proposed that we get myself a dependency visa so I could go work again and the children visitor visas. We do realise that the children wont be able to go to school in the UK and that one of us would have to return to South Africa to get them their dependency visas within the 6 months.
Do anybody forsee any problems with visitors visas being granted to to children or any other visa related problems?
TIA
Visit visas are inappropriate as you are proposing the children will reside in UK.
And they are unlikely to be granted for that reason.
You cannot bring children to UK and switch them later as and when finances improve.And withholding children from school once they are in UK is (probably) illegal.Members of your family can’t apply in the UK as your dependant if they hold a visitor visa.
To reside in UK your children need an appropriate visa from the get go.
Apart form the problem of both parents residing in the UK, what about healthcare cover for your children?erasmusdt wrote: My self and the children remain in SA but wish to also go over, our main problem is that the nhs surcharge is so high. I recently proposed that we get myself a dependency visa so I could go work again and the children visitor visas. We do realise that the children wont be able to go to school in the UK and that one of us would have to return to South Africa to get them their dependency visas within the 6 months.
If you are finding the NHS Surcharge fees excessive, in the unfortunate event of your children needing medical treatment while they are in the UK as visitors, how will you meet the cost of NHS fees which will be charged at 150%erasmusdt wrote:I am not concerend about health care or any other issues, just the visitor visa
Sorry Casa, I edidted my post with the 50% extra before I saw your post. Yes the Immigration Act 2014 changed the rules for the NHS from 6 April 2015.Casa wrote:If you are finding the NHS Surcharge fees excessive, in the unfortunate event of your children needing medical treatment while they are in the UK as visitors, how will you meet the cost of NHS fees which will be charged at 150%erasmusdt wrote:I am not concerend about health care or any other issues, just the visitor visa
You did.erasmusdt wrote:I did state that we will return to South africa to apply for their dependancy visas, also I should probably have stated it but asumed that its understood that this will happen before their visitors visas expire ie. within the 6 month period granted for visitors.
I will also not initially go with them but send them first to their mother and then aaply for my dependency visa
Can you afford to pay if God forbid one gets ill or involved in an accident? You should be concerned.erasmusdt wrote:I am not concerend about health care or any other issues, just the visitor visa
No it doesntWanderer wrote:Can you afford to pay if God forbid one gets ill or involved in an accident? You should be concerned.erasmusdt wrote:I am not concerend about health care or any other issues, just the visitor visa
Visit visas are just that, visits, not resident visas. Surely too the additional cost of flights to and fro would add up to more the than the cost of the correct visa?
Yes indeed. Any outstanding NHS debt over £500 which has not been repaid within 3 months will result in a refusal of future visa applications under 320(11) Aggravating circumstances and frustrating the Immigration Rules.Petaltop wrote:Sorry Casa, I edidted my post with the 50% extra before I saw your post. Yes the Immigration Act 2014 changed the rules for the NHS from 6 April 2015.Casa wrote:If you are finding the NHS Surcharge fees excessive, in the unfortunate event of your children needing medical treatment while they are in the UK as visitors, how will you meet the cost of NHS fees which will be charged at 150%erasmusdt wrote:I am not concerend about health care or any other issues, just the visitor visa
Isn't there something about NHS debt over £500 needing to be paid if they want a visa?
Exactly. That's why I suggested that the wife (the visa holder) sees if she can get one of those very long term interest free credit cards, as she must have built up some credit now after her time in the UK.noajthan wrote: Children can come when you can afford to secure correct visa for them, with healthcare.
Budgeting for health care is not an optional extra as who knows what can happen and when.
In that case you need dependant visa for them and to pay the IHS fee.erasmusdt wrote:I am not asking about heathcare, we lived in the Uk for 5 years and know how it works. It is with the visa I need help
You didn't have to ask but healthcare and schooling and misuse of visit visas are all relevant issues in relation to your original question:erasmusdt wrote:Please forget about the health care..I did not once ask any opions about health care.
All I want to know is will children be able to get visitors visas to visit their mother in the Uk who is there on an ancestry visa
Visit visas are not designed for this; don't you think everyone would turn up on visit visas if they could.Do anybody forsee any problems ... or any other visa related problems
You left in 2012. The NHS changed from 6 April 2015 under the Immigration Act 2014.erasmusdt wrote:I am not asking about heathcare, we lived in the Uk for 5 years and know how it works.
Unlikely.erasmusdt wrote:This has become very side tracked. I have no issues or worries about healthcare.
All I want to know is: Could children get a visitors visa to visit their mother in the Uk who is there on an ancestry visa?
our main problem is that the nhs surcharge is so high
Thank you.Casa wrote:Unlikely unless they can show strong ties to their home country to convince the ECO that they won't overstay as visitors. With their mother residing in the UK this may prove difficult.
Reading through your opening post I see that you intend to arrive in the UK on a dependent visa with your children and only return to SA to apply for their own dependent visas when their visitor visas expire.Casa wrote:Difficult for a child to prove strong ties as an adult would be expected to show evidence of property ownership, employment and self-sufficiency in the home country.
You would need to submit evidence that you are the SOLE carer of your children and that they have a commitment to education in their home country. If they are intending to stay in the UK for 6 months, study in the home country will lapse.