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New successful case and testimonial for an EEA Residence Card for an Indonesian spouse of an EEA citizen.

“We have received the paperwork successfully! We are very, very pleased with these good news! Thank you again for all your efforts on our behalf, we will  certainly recommend your firm in the future”. This came from Erik and Siti, a Dutch – Indonesian couple who are living in the UK. Erik is from the Netherlands and was working in the UK, so we applied for a Residence Card for his Indonesian wife, Siti. Residence Card, which is a 5 years ‘visa’, allows to work, be self-employed etc. Strictly speaking, it does not ‘allow’ work but confirms the right to work, which Siti has with or without this visa. The way European law works, for direct family members the rights to reside and to work in the UK derive automatically from the law, not from a ‘visa stamp’. This Residence Card is voluntary!   If it is voluntary, was it worth applying for it? Absolutely! It is a ‘visa stamp’ (biometric visa card) for 5 years. It is well-known to employers, so its holder can simply show it as a pr

New successful case and testimonial on Permanent Residence application for a Polish (EEA) citizen.

“My first contact with the 1 st 4Immigration team was a couple of years ago when I was looking for some advice on how to get my British Citizenship. They have a special fee just for advice so I met with them and got all my questions answered instead of losing my time - and money. Because the law changed whilst I was waiting to apply I had to get my ILR first. 1 st 4Immigration did the whole process, making it so easy for me. Everything was so smooth that it felt a big relief not having to go through all the forms and documents by myself. They have experience so they have all the answers I was looking for when I wasn't sure about documents. They were just brilliant. I was worried that my passport wouldn't come back in time for a trip I had planned but as they had assured me, it did. I'm definitely using them again when the time comes for my British Citizenship. And special thanks to Neil who was always so positive and lovely to talk to. It's been a pleasure going thro

New successful case and testimonial on Permanent Residence Card application as a Civil Partner of an EEA citizen.

“Thank you so much for this amazing news. And thanks to your entire team for your help with this process. I am incredibly relieved to get this news and really can't thank you all enough for your assistance in preparing my application. I look forward to seeing the card (Biometric Residence Permit) when it arrives.” This came from Mr L, an American citizen, who asked us to help with his permanent residence application under the EEA law. Our client is married to a Lithuanian citizen who has been exercising EU Treaty rights in the UK for 5 years while they were both residing here. We submitted an application for a Permanent Residence Card as a family member of an EEA citizen and after some wait (as it is often the case with EEA applications) it has been approved this week! The Biometric Residence Permit is a 'visa card' which is valid for 10 years. The next step would be applying for British Citizenship, although it is voluntary. For an individual advice or to make your a

Places still available! OISC Level 1 course, Friday - Saturday 24 - 25th June 2016, City of London, from a practising OISC-accredited immigration company. CPD 10 hours accepted by the OISC.

Join us for this very informative and practical 2-day course at our office in the City of London!   UK Immigration Rules, visas, switching, visas for spouses and partners, what a great idea! O r perhaps you would enjoy learning about British Citizenship or Points-Based System, EU/EEA applications and European law?   1st 4Immigration Ltd is a practicing OISC-accredited immigration company, OISC ref F200800152. After many years of experience – and hundreds of successful cases – we are sharing our experience to help you to prepare for your OISC Level 1 assessment and accreditation or, if you are already practicing, to increase your knowledge. You can read  Testimonials on our immigration cases here.   TRAINING DATES:    24-25th June 2016 Our tutors are our very own OISC-accredited practicing immigration advisers who handle the real cases during the week. Unlike most traditional courses, ours is conducted using plain language and does not simply contain quotes from the Immigration Rules.

English language requirement for spouses of UK citizens and for Points-Based System migrants: have you ever heard of NARIC? If not, time to read this as you can’t use an overseas degree certificate anymore without it.

We previously posted some useful information for spouses and partners of UK citizens about English language tests. This post is for everyone who needs to meet the English language requirement when applying for a UK visa (including Points-Based System migrants). As you may know, besides taking an approved English language test, you can also use a degree which was taught in English. For example, a Bachelor degree from a UK university Рnice and easy. You can use it when applying for a UK Spouse visa, UK Tier 1 (Entrepreneur) visa, Tier 2 visa and so on. In other words, having a UK degree means there is no need to take a test. Now, what to do if you hold an overseas degree, ie a degree from a university outside the UK but it was taught in English? Until approx mid-March 2016 we could use a Points-Based System calculator on the UKVI website and we could use it for both Tier 1 / 2 visas and Spouse/Partner/Fianc̩ visas. A Bachelor degree from South Africa, India or Nigeria as well a

English language test for spouses of British citizens: what is going on? Part 3: permanent residency (Indefinite Leave).

The current requirement of B1 level at the permanent residency stage remains unchanged, at least for now.     The question is what to do if you used a disapproved English test when applying for your 1 st Spouse / Partner visa, then didn’t need to use anything for your extension, and are going to apply for Indefinite Leave, say, in 2017-2018?     Again, the devil is in detail, detail of the wording of the Immigration Rules. Currently, the wording implies that you’d need to have one of the currently approved tests (IELTS or one from Trinity College) and that test must have been taken no earlier than 2 years ago. For most it does mean taking another test or taking the same test again.        More can be found on the Rules here: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/immigration-rules/immigration-rules-appendix-koll     For an individual advice or to make an application please contact us: info@1st4immigration.com or visit www.1st4immigration.com If you are an Immigr

English language test for spouses of British citizens: what is going on? Part 2: visa extension from October 2016 onwards.

If you are going to apply for your extension from October 2016 onwards you would need to demonstrate level A2   and not level A1.    The rules for a Spouse / Partner extension, in terms of English language, are going to change in October 2016. For now, the level is A1 (most basic one) for both initial visa and for extension. However, the government thought it would be a good idea to demand a higher, A2 level, when it comes to extensions. The current requirement of B1 level at the permanent residency stage remains unchanged.        So, A1 when you apply for the 1 st visa, then A2 for extension and B1 for permanent residency. A1 is the most basic one, B1 is higher of these three and C2 is the highest altogether (fortunately, not required for now!)   What to do if you used a disapproved test when you applied for the 1 st visa and are due for extension in October or later? It depends on the wording of the new rules and it is possible you’d need to take a test again, this ti