Your address history helps the decision maker trace back your physical residence and prolonged overseas stays so you should provide a seamless chronology of residences (which admittedly can be painful in some cases, particularly for some students who moved every term).
surabhi wrote:Hi,
a)If the stay was not continous in certain year, what should I write in the the end date? Take a reasonable approach. If for example you lived in Place A for a month, then place B for another month,
place C for a week, back to place B for two weeks, it may not make much sense to be this pedantic. If you had one more or less fixed abode, use that and give as the end date the date you finally moved out. Try to align your addresses with the address on your HRMC file/driving licence/bank statements.
b)Are they really looking for continuation in one address to the other? Yes but there won't be a big drama if there is some lack of continuity.
c) I should give my overseas address also, to give continuity in address? Yes, overseas too.
Make sure you don't give an overseas address for any period you haven't declared as an absence - otherwise,
that's sure to be a red flag.
or just give UK address with exact start and end dates, by ignoring gaps?
Any answer appreciated.
thanks
Surabhi