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Classroom OISC Level 1 course on weekends from a practicing OISC-accredited immigration company in the City

This is a 2-day weekend course at our office in the City of London. Multi Travel Visas Ltd and a sister company, 1st 4Immigration Ltd, are both accredited by The OISC, ref F201100418 and F200800152 respectively. After many years of experience – and hundreds of successful cases – we are offering to share our experience with you to help you prepare for your OISC Level 1 assessment and accreditation. You can read Testimonials on our immigration cases here. Our tutors are our very own OISC-accredited practicing immigration advisers who handle the real cases during the week and teach on weekends. You can read about them on the Tutors page. Unlike most traditional courses, ours is conducted using plain language and does not simply contain quotes from the Immigration Rules. We include cases studies from our practice, answers to most common questions, a Questions&Answers session and a mock Level 1 assessment, which is given to the candidates at the end to complete in their own

Online CPD course 6 hours, Self-employment Income in Visa Applications (by a Self-employed Immigration Adviser)

For our colleagues Immigration Advisers and Solicitors: Our online training course is accepted by The OISC and SRA, CPD ref number EJE/14IM. Self-employment Income in Visa Applications (by a Self-employed Immigration Adviser).  6 core hours CPD credit. This course addresses the Rules, issues and documents, which are required for the visa applicants who are self-employed, such as a Sole Trader or an owner of a limited company or a partner in a partnership or  an LLP. We explain how to apply the Rules for self-employed people who are applying for a Spouse/Partner visa including the differences when self-employment was in the UK and outside the UK, when applying for either an Entry Clearance or for a Leave to Remain. Plus for those applying to extend a Tier 1 (General) visa or for an ILR based on it; for those who are applying under the European/EEA law, such as family members applying for an EEA Residence Card (EEA2) or permanent residency (EEA4) or for British Citizenship for both