Thanks for that ksand! Yes, I knew that the 5 years doesn't count on the fiancee visa...I was basing that timing on my first spouse visa, which was granted late April 2016, which would actually put me at October for 2.5 years I think? I will just go by what it says on my visa, which is Novermber 28th and start getting paperwork late October dated for within the 28 days :-)
So you came to the U.K. on a fiancé visa, got married, returned to the US and applied for a spousal visa?
Or did you come to the U.K. on a fiancé visa, get married and switch to FLR(M)?
Spousal visas and FLR(M) are different visas, valid for different lengths of time and cost different amounts of money. Spousal visas currently cost £1,523 with £600 IHS, while FLR(M) costs £1,033 with £500 IHS. Spousal visas are only issued outside the U.K. and FLR(M) visas are only issued inside the U.K.
If you came to the U.K. on a spousal visa, issued outside the U.K., then it’s valid for 33 months and you can apply for FLR(M) 28 days before you reach 30 months in the U.K. after entering on the spousal visa. So if you have a spousal visa granted end April 2016 and you entered the country on it at that time, it would expire end Jan 2019 and you could apply for FLR(M) 28 days before end October (28 days before reaching 30 months since you entered the UK on the visa).
If you switched to FLR(M) from inside the U.K. the visa is valid 30 months only and you cannot apply for the next FLR(M) until 28 days before expiry... because you have to spend 2.5 years in the U.K. on FLR(M) before you can apply for the next visa.
I need my stepson's passport? I didn't think I did last time (although I did need the number off of it to put on the FLR(M) form), and certainly didn't need any mail in his name. He's 14 and lives with his mother so have no idea what type of mail he would get in his name. That would be a new one to me.
It’s a new requirement, introduced in 2017. All the details are listed on the FLR(M) form.
You MUST now include:
- his passport
- his birth certificate
- a letter proving where he lives (I.e. from his school or GP surgery)
As far as the charges go, I put the NHS surcharge and visa fee separately on my list there, as I know I have to pay the NHS surcharge first, then they take the visa fee out later, so I know the total will be £1,533.
Not necessarily - if you apply in person you pay it all at the time of booking your appointment: £1,033 + £500 + £610 appointment fee... so in that case you would need all of that in your account on the same day.
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