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Moderators: Casa, John, ChetanOjha, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix
But what I'm trying to hold on to is the fact that I have not exceeded the 180days and there is a clause that says that they "consider discretion".Casa wrote:Unless you are prepared to lose your application fee, I suggest that you wait until you have no more than 90 days of absence in the 12 month period prior to applying.
At present you are almost double the permitted absence.
As you have already been advised you need to wait till your absences are below 90 days within 12 months or you could just go ahead and apply and risk a denial and loose all that money177DaysOver wrote:But what I'm trying to hold on to is the fact that I have not exceeded the 180days and there is a clause that says that they "consider discretion".Casa wrote:Unless you are prepared to lose your application fee, I suggest that you wait until you have no more than 90 days of absence in the 12 month period prior to applying.
At present you are almost double the permitted absence.
I have been in the UK since 2007, in which I went to university for 3 years, then immediately started to work full time in my career path as a Digital Designer. Only last year in May I was made redundant and started my self employment in a similar career path still as designer but mainly photographer.
I can prove I have been here for 10 years and that I have never been absent more than 30 days in a years since 2007 with the exception of the last 12 months.
I went to Germany to experience as an international photographer to get mentoring and learn the language as well.
You exceeded the 90 days requirement by almost an extra 90 days! This is the first thing you need to keep in mind. Yes, you are under 180 days (barely), but you need to give them very good reasons to disregard your absences.177DaysOver wrote:But what I'm trying to hold on to is the fact that I have not exceeded the 180days and there is a clause that says that they "consider discretion".Casa wrote:Unless you are prepared to lose your application fee, I suggest that you wait until you have no more than 90 days of absence in the 12 month period prior to applying.
At present you are almost double the permitted absence.
Not sure why you say this about 'not exceeded 180 days'. There is no limit like this for citizenship that you cannot be absent for more than 180 days otherwise continuity is broken etc and you should not confuse the EU rules/UK Immigration rules absence limits with citizenship limits.177DaysOver wrote:But what I'm trying to hold on to is the fact that I have not exceeded the 180days and there is a clause that says that they "consider discretion".
CR001 wrote:Not sure why you say this about 'not exceeded 180 days'. There is no limit like this for citizenship that you cannot be absent for more than 180 days otherwise continuity is broken etc and you should not confuse the EU rules/UK Immigration rules absence limits with citizenship limits.177DaysOver wrote:But what I'm trying to hold on to is the fact that I have not exceeded the 180days and there is a clause that says that they "consider discretion".
The requirement is no more than 450 days absence in the 5 years immediately preceding your application and no more than 90 days in the final 12 months immediately preceding your application. This is in addition to being physically present in the UK on the exact same date 5 years ago as the day you apply now. Citizenship is based on laws, not a 'rules'. You would be asking for discretion, not guaranteed and HO do not have to exercise discretion as the laws and requirements are clear.
You have nothing concrete or substantive to prove the majority of your estate etc is in the UK. Your mother being here doesn't count, neither does having a bank account.
Even a solicitor (wouldn't advise this to be honest) will likely tell you your application will fail.
I have all my state in the UK even though my state is not a home, I have money invested and savings. Also my mother which I have lived all my life with, and have supported financially. We live in the same property owned by her UK boyfriend.(101 - 179 days) Total number of absences normally disregarded only if all
other requirements are met and:
- • you have demonstrated links with the UK through
presence of family, and established home and a
substantial part of your estate.
Even people that own a house here face an uphill battle in trying to convince the caseworker to disregard their excess absences. You don't even own a house here, and your situation is not at all uncommon. After all most of us have a bank account, savings / investments and maybe a relative here. I think your chances are virtually 0. Just because they can use discretion does not mean they actually will, especially when you have almost double the acceptable absences.177DaysOver wrote: I say that because I saw this info on the application form guide/booklet here, page 8:https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/s ... y_2017.pdf
I have all my state in the UK even though my state is not a home, I have money invested and savings. Also my mother which I have lived all my life with, and have supported financially. We live in the same property owned by her UK boyfriend.(101 - 179 days) Total number of absences normally disregarded only if all
other requirements are met and:
- • you have demonstrated links with the UK through
presence of family, and established home and a
substantial part of your estate.
I wanted to apply for the citizenship now, so I could try and make a name for myself as an international photographer in Europe with my business.