How should I answer the questions in the “Employment and Income” section of a UK visa application?
On the "Employment and Income" section of the visa application, the following questions are listed:
- What is the cost to you personally of your trip in GBP(£)?
- The total amount of money you have for this trip
- How much will they [the person paying for my trip] be paying towards your trip (in GBP £)?
- What is the total amount in GBP(£)?
My Father will be paying for the whole trip for me, so I assume No 3. will be how much he will be paying me - £1,500 I don't need much money because I will be hosted by the friend I am visiting, so I just need money for the flight (£533) and some extra to spend on various non-essential things. Food and accommodation will be free for me).
Also, I assume the total amount (No 4.) will be £1,500 too, because that's the amount of money I'll be spending overall.
However, is it OK for me to answer No 1 and 2 with £0?
visas uk standard-visitor-visa proof-of-funds applications
|
show 1 more comment
On the "Employment and Income" section of the visa application, the following questions are listed:
- What is the cost to you personally of your trip in GBP(£)?
- The total amount of money you have for this trip
- How much will they [the person paying for my trip] be paying towards your trip (in GBP £)?
- What is the total amount in GBP(£)?
My Father will be paying for the whole trip for me, so I assume No 3. will be how much he will be paying me - £1,500 I don't need much money because I will be hosted by the friend I am visiting, so I just need money for the flight (£533) and some extra to spend on various non-essential things. Food and accommodation will be free for me).
Also, I assume the total amount (No 4.) will be £1,500 too, because that's the amount of money I'll be spending overall.
However, is it OK for me to answer No 1 and 2 with £0?
visas uk standard-visitor-visa proof-of-funds applications
I don't know what you are seeing online, but on the paper form this (2) is worded as: "What money is available to you for your trip?"
– Michael Hampton
Apr 7 '16 at 22:27
@GayotFow So I should answer No 3 & 4 with £1,500 and No 1 & 2 with £0?
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:35
@GayotFow re-reading both your comments my understanding is that 1 should be £0 and 2, 3 and 4 should all be £1,500, correct? Thanks
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:37
I would advise you to label every monetary value with currency, even when the question specifies the currency, just to be completely unambiguous. There has been at least one question on this site about a visa refusal that was at least in part based on a misunderstanding of the currency: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/62169/…
– phoog
Apr 25 '16 at 21:24
@phoog you can not input special characters such as '£' in the text box on the online application. I'm not sure you can even enter letters in the currency question text boxes.
– Joel Damien
Apr 30 '16 at 21:16
|
show 1 more comment
On the "Employment and Income" section of the visa application, the following questions are listed:
- What is the cost to you personally of your trip in GBP(£)?
- The total amount of money you have for this trip
- How much will they [the person paying for my trip] be paying towards your trip (in GBP £)?
- What is the total amount in GBP(£)?
My Father will be paying for the whole trip for me, so I assume No 3. will be how much he will be paying me - £1,500 I don't need much money because I will be hosted by the friend I am visiting, so I just need money for the flight (£533) and some extra to spend on various non-essential things. Food and accommodation will be free for me).
Also, I assume the total amount (No 4.) will be £1,500 too, because that's the amount of money I'll be spending overall.
However, is it OK for me to answer No 1 and 2 with £0?
visas uk standard-visitor-visa proof-of-funds applications
On the "Employment and Income" section of the visa application, the following questions are listed:
- What is the cost to you personally of your trip in GBP(£)?
- The total amount of money you have for this trip
- How much will they [the person paying for my trip] be paying towards your trip (in GBP £)?
- What is the total amount in GBP(£)?
My Father will be paying for the whole trip for me, so I assume No 3. will be how much he will be paying me - £1,500 I don't need much money because I will be hosted by the friend I am visiting, so I just need money for the flight (£533) and some extra to spend on various non-essential things. Food and accommodation will be free for me).
Also, I assume the total amount (No 4.) will be £1,500 too, because that's the amount of money I'll be spending overall.
However, is it OK for me to answer No 1 and 2 with £0?
visas uk standard-visitor-visa proof-of-funds applications
visas uk standard-visitor-visa proof-of-funds applications
edited Apr 18 '16 at 15:24
CMaster
10.7k44792
10.7k44792
asked Apr 7 '16 at 21:56
Joel DamienJoel Damien
1,9401829
1,9401829
I don't know what you are seeing online, but on the paper form this (2) is worded as: "What money is available to you for your trip?"
– Michael Hampton
Apr 7 '16 at 22:27
@GayotFow So I should answer No 3 & 4 with £1,500 and No 1 & 2 with £0?
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:35
@GayotFow re-reading both your comments my understanding is that 1 should be £0 and 2, 3 and 4 should all be £1,500, correct? Thanks
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:37
I would advise you to label every monetary value with currency, even when the question specifies the currency, just to be completely unambiguous. There has been at least one question on this site about a visa refusal that was at least in part based on a misunderstanding of the currency: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/62169/…
– phoog
Apr 25 '16 at 21:24
@phoog you can not input special characters such as '£' in the text box on the online application. I'm not sure you can even enter letters in the currency question text boxes.
– Joel Damien
Apr 30 '16 at 21:16
|
show 1 more comment
I don't know what you are seeing online, but on the paper form this (2) is worded as: "What money is available to you for your trip?"
– Michael Hampton
Apr 7 '16 at 22:27
@GayotFow So I should answer No 3 & 4 with £1,500 and No 1 & 2 with £0?
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:35
@GayotFow re-reading both your comments my understanding is that 1 should be £0 and 2, 3 and 4 should all be £1,500, correct? Thanks
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:37
I would advise you to label every monetary value with currency, even when the question specifies the currency, just to be completely unambiguous. There has been at least one question on this site about a visa refusal that was at least in part based on a misunderstanding of the currency: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/62169/…
– phoog
Apr 25 '16 at 21:24
@phoog you can not input special characters such as '£' in the text box on the online application. I'm not sure you can even enter letters in the currency question text boxes.
– Joel Damien
Apr 30 '16 at 21:16
I don't know what you are seeing online, but on the paper form this (2) is worded as: "What money is available to you for your trip?"
– Michael Hampton
Apr 7 '16 at 22:27
I don't know what you are seeing online, but on the paper form this (2) is worded as: "What money is available to you for your trip?"
– Michael Hampton
Apr 7 '16 at 22:27
@GayotFow So I should answer No 3 & 4 with £1,500 and No 1 & 2 with £0?
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:35
@GayotFow So I should answer No 3 & 4 with £1,500 and No 1 & 2 with £0?
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:35
@GayotFow re-reading both your comments my understanding is that 1 should be £0 and 2, 3 and 4 should all be £1,500, correct? Thanks
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:37
@GayotFow re-reading both your comments my understanding is that 1 should be £0 and 2, 3 and 4 should all be £1,500, correct? Thanks
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:37
I would advise you to label every monetary value with currency, even when the question specifies the currency, just to be completely unambiguous. There has been at least one question on this site about a visa refusal that was at least in part based on a misunderstanding of the currency: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/62169/…
– phoog
Apr 25 '16 at 21:24
I would advise you to label every monetary value with currency, even when the question specifies the currency, just to be completely unambiguous. There has been at least one question on this site about a visa refusal that was at least in part based on a misunderstanding of the currency: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/62169/…
– phoog
Apr 25 '16 at 21:24
@phoog you can not input special characters such as '£' in the text box on the online application. I'm not sure you can even enter letters in the currency question text boxes.
– Joel Damien
Apr 30 '16 at 21:16
@phoog you can not input special characters such as '£' in the text box on the online application. I'm not sure you can even enter letters in the currency question text boxes.
– Joel Damien
Apr 30 '16 at 21:16
|
show 1 more comment
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
If you apply with case when you have your sponsor (father)
Can be 0. (or some personal savings.)
£1500
(Long term students Tier4 if they want to stay in London they need to have at least £1,265 for each month, or £1,015 for each month if they study outside of London. Though this can be less, if they prove with documents that accommodation and food are prepaid, or if they have an invitation and confirmation from their host.)£1500
£1500
You should also have questions like:
If your tickets already paid...
If you going to have a short stay it's better to show prepaid accommodation or an realistic amount to cover an accommodation cost. (As short stay is more expensive than long term Tier 4 students accommodations.) Plus tickets cost or flight confirmations. Plus money for food and for purpose of your stay (shopping, study, traveling).
Based on my own experience of applying for Tier4/study UK visas.
For long term stay we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation for 1 month. 3. Paid studies 4. £1265/£1015 per month. (London/Out of London).
For short stay (less than 1 month) we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation 3. Paid studies or travel program 4. £1265/£1015 (London/Out of London) (It's might be more than required, but better to show more than less.)
Seems like my first info was outdated, as I found this:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/515465/Tier-_4-_of-the-points-based-system-v36.0.pdf
Applications submitted on or after 6 April 2012
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
Inner London - £1,000 per calendar month
Outer London and the rest of the UK - £800 per calendar month
Applications submitted on or after 12 November 2015
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
In London - £1,265 per calendar month
Outside London - £1,015 per calendar month
page 5.
https://www.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/entry-clearance-and-immigration.pdf
The monthly maintenance requirements state that you must show you have
the required sum of money for maintenance in your account for a period
of 28 days (£1,000 per month for nine months in inner London and £800
per month for outer London or elsewhere in the UK. Up to a maximum of
nine months). This money must take the form of cash funds in the bank
(including savings accounts and current accounts, even when notice
must be given), a loan letter, or official financial or government
sponsorship available to you.
1
Can you provide a reference to back up this claim:If you going to London you need to have £1000 for each month. Outside of London £800 for each month.
?
– JoErNanO♦
Apr 18 '16 at 15:43
£1,000 per month for London is significantly out-of-whack, they will surely refuse an application that aggressive and unrealistic on applicant credibility; did you make a transcription error? Or using out-of-date information?
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 18:47
@GayotFow I wish you had told me that before, I put down £1,500 and have already submitted my application, and am about to submit my documents on Thursday. I'll write a cover letter saying £1,500 is just the maximum I'd be spending/my father is willing to pay, and that it includes my air fare (which is £600ish) and include that with my application then... would that be alright? I will be staying for just over 2 weeks and I do intend to do some shopping too.
– Joel Damien
Apr 19 '16 at 20:24
The poster above wrote £1,000 per month (less if acco is provided). That's £33 per day. Compared to 'Lonely Planet's' cheapest estimate of £85 per day, it's ridiculously out-of-whack. I'm thinking the poster made a transcription error or something like that. It may not be a show-stopper for your application though
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 20:36
2
I answered as this answer said. 1. as 0 and 2., 3., 4. as £1500. I got my visa yesterday, flying later tonight. Thank you ALL for your help, I plan on making an article on how I answered all of the questions and what documents I included. Not sure where to post such a thing though.
– Joel Damien
May 6 '16 at 8:05
|
show 5 more comments
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
If you apply with case when you have your sponsor (father)
Can be 0. (or some personal savings.)
£1500
(Long term students Tier4 if they want to stay in London they need to have at least £1,265 for each month, or £1,015 for each month if they study outside of London. Though this can be less, if they prove with documents that accommodation and food are prepaid, or if they have an invitation and confirmation from their host.)£1500
£1500
You should also have questions like:
If your tickets already paid...
If you going to have a short stay it's better to show prepaid accommodation or an realistic amount to cover an accommodation cost. (As short stay is more expensive than long term Tier 4 students accommodations.) Plus tickets cost or flight confirmations. Plus money for food and for purpose of your stay (shopping, study, traveling).
Based on my own experience of applying for Tier4/study UK visas.
For long term stay we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation for 1 month. 3. Paid studies 4. £1265/£1015 per month. (London/Out of London).
For short stay (less than 1 month) we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation 3. Paid studies or travel program 4. £1265/£1015 (London/Out of London) (It's might be more than required, but better to show more than less.)
Seems like my first info was outdated, as I found this:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/515465/Tier-_4-_of-the-points-based-system-v36.0.pdf
Applications submitted on or after 6 April 2012
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
Inner London - £1,000 per calendar month
Outer London and the rest of the UK - £800 per calendar month
Applications submitted on or after 12 November 2015
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
In London - £1,265 per calendar month
Outside London - £1,015 per calendar month
page 5.
https://www.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/entry-clearance-and-immigration.pdf
The monthly maintenance requirements state that you must show you have
the required sum of money for maintenance in your account for a period
of 28 days (£1,000 per month for nine months in inner London and £800
per month for outer London or elsewhere in the UK. Up to a maximum of
nine months). This money must take the form of cash funds in the bank
(including savings accounts and current accounts, even when notice
must be given), a loan letter, or official financial or government
sponsorship available to you.
1
Can you provide a reference to back up this claim:If you going to London you need to have £1000 for each month. Outside of London £800 for each month.
?
– JoErNanO♦
Apr 18 '16 at 15:43
£1,000 per month for London is significantly out-of-whack, they will surely refuse an application that aggressive and unrealistic on applicant credibility; did you make a transcription error? Or using out-of-date information?
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 18:47
@GayotFow I wish you had told me that before, I put down £1,500 and have already submitted my application, and am about to submit my documents on Thursday. I'll write a cover letter saying £1,500 is just the maximum I'd be spending/my father is willing to pay, and that it includes my air fare (which is £600ish) and include that with my application then... would that be alright? I will be staying for just over 2 weeks and I do intend to do some shopping too.
– Joel Damien
Apr 19 '16 at 20:24
The poster above wrote £1,000 per month (less if acco is provided). That's £33 per day. Compared to 'Lonely Planet's' cheapest estimate of £85 per day, it's ridiculously out-of-whack. I'm thinking the poster made a transcription error or something like that. It may not be a show-stopper for your application though
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 20:36
2
I answered as this answer said. 1. as 0 and 2., 3., 4. as £1500. I got my visa yesterday, flying later tonight. Thank you ALL for your help, I plan on making an article on how I answered all of the questions and what documents I included. Not sure where to post such a thing though.
– Joel Damien
May 6 '16 at 8:05
|
show 5 more comments
If you apply with case when you have your sponsor (father)
Can be 0. (or some personal savings.)
£1500
(Long term students Tier4 if they want to stay in London they need to have at least £1,265 for each month, or £1,015 for each month if they study outside of London. Though this can be less, if they prove with documents that accommodation and food are prepaid, or if they have an invitation and confirmation from their host.)£1500
£1500
You should also have questions like:
If your tickets already paid...
If you going to have a short stay it's better to show prepaid accommodation or an realistic amount to cover an accommodation cost. (As short stay is more expensive than long term Tier 4 students accommodations.) Plus tickets cost or flight confirmations. Plus money for food and for purpose of your stay (shopping, study, traveling).
Based on my own experience of applying for Tier4/study UK visas.
For long term stay we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation for 1 month. 3. Paid studies 4. £1265/£1015 per month. (London/Out of London).
For short stay (less than 1 month) we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation 3. Paid studies or travel program 4. £1265/£1015 (London/Out of London) (It's might be more than required, but better to show more than less.)
Seems like my first info was outdated, as I found this:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/515465/Tier-_4-_of-the-points-based-system-v36.0.pdf
Applications submitted on or after 6 April 2012
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
Inner London - £1,000 per calendar month
Outer London and the rest of the UK - £800 per calendar month
Applications submitted on or after 12 November 2015
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
In London - £1,265 per calendar month
Outside London - £1,015 per calendar month
page 5.
https://www.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/entry-clearance-and-immigration.pdf
The monthly maintenance requirements state that you must show you have
the required sum of money for maintenance in your account for a period
of 28 days (£1,000 per month for nine months in inner London and £800
per month for outer London or elsewhere in the UK. Up to a maximum of
nine months). This money must take the form of cash funds in the bank
(including savings accounts and current accounts, even when notice
must be given), a loan letter, or official financial or government
sponsorship available to you.
1
Can you provide a reference to back up this claim:If you going to London you need to have £1000 for each month. Outside of London £800 for each month.
?
– JoErNanO♦
Apr 18 '16 at 15:43
£1,000 per month for London is significantly out-of-whack, they will surely refuse an application that aggressive and unrealistic on applicant credibility; did you make a transcription error? Or using out-of-date information?
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 18:47
@GayotFow I wish you had told me that before, I put down £1,500 and have already submitted my application, and am about to submit my documents on Thursday. I'll write a cover letter saying £1,500 is just the maximum I'd be spending/my father is willing to pay, and that it includes my air fare (which is £600ish) and include that with my application then... would that be alright? I will be staying for just over 2 weeks and I do intend to do some shopping too.
– Joel Damien
Apr 19 '16 at 20:24
The poster above wrote £1,000 per month (less if acco is provided). That's £33 per day. Compared to 'Lonely Planet's' cheapest estimate of £85 per day, it's ridiculously out-of-whack. I'm thinking the poster made a transcription error or something like that. It may not be a show-stopper for your application though
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 20:36
2
I answered as this answer said. 1. as 0 and 2., 3., 4. as £1500. I got my visa yesterday, flying later tonight. Thank you ALL for your help, I plan on making an article on how I answered all of the questions and what documents I included. Not sure where to post such a thing though.
– Joel Damien
May 6 '16 at 8:05
|
show 5 more comments
If you apply with case when you have your sponsor (father)
Can be 0. (or some personal savings.)
£1500
(Long term students Tier4 if they want to stay in London they need to have at least £1,265 for each month, or £1,015 for each month if they study outside of London. Though this can be less, if they prove with documents that accommodation and food are prepaid, or if they have an invitation and confirmation from their host.)£1500
£1500
You should also have questions like:
If your tickets already paid...
If you going to have a short stay it's better to show prepaid accommodation or an realistic amount to cover an accommodation cost. (As short stay is more expensive than long term Tier 4 students accommodations.) Plus tickets cost or flight confirmations. Plus money for food and for purpose of your stay (shopping, study, traveling).
Based on my own experience of applying for Tier4/study UK visas.
For long term stay we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation for 1 month. 3. Paid studies 4. £1265/£1015 per month. (London/Out of London).
For short stay (less than 1 month) we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation 3. Paid studies or travel program 4. £1265/£1015 (London/Out of London) (It's might be more than required, but better to show more than less.)
Seems like my first info was outdated, as I found this:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/515465/Tier-_4-_of-the-points-based-system-v36.0.pdf
Applications submitted on or after 6 April 2012
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
Inner London - £1,000 per calendar month
Outer London and the rest of the UK - £800 per calendar month
Applications submitted on or after 12 November 2015
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
In London - £1,265 per calendar month
Outside London - £1,015 per calendar month
page 5.
https://www.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/entry-clearance-and-immigration.pdf
The monthly maintenance requirements state that you must show you have
the required sum of money for maintenance in your account for a period
of 28 days (£1,000 per month for nine months in inner London and £800
per month for outer London or elsewhere in the UK. Up to a maximum of
nine months). This money must take the form of cash funds in the bank
(including savings accounts and current accounts, even when notice
must be given), a loan letter, or official financial or government
sponsorship available to you.
If you apply with case when you have your sponsor (father)
Can be 0. (or some personal savings.)
£1500
(Long term students Tier4 if they want to stay in London they need to have at least £1,265 for each month, or £1,015 for each month if they study outside of London. Though this can be less, if they prove with documents that accommodation and food are prepaid, or if they have an invitation and confirmation from their host.)£1500
£1500
You should also have questions like:
If your tickets already paid...
If you going to have a short stay it's better to show prepaid accommodation or an realistic amount to cover an accommodation cost. (As short stay is more expensive than long term Tier 4 students accommodations.) Plus tickets cost or flight confirmations. Plus money for food and for purpose of your stay (shopping, study, traveling).
Based on my own experience of applying for Tier4/study UK visas.
For long term stay we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation for 1 month. 3. Paid studies 4. £1265/£1015 per month. (London/Out of London).
For short stay (less than 1 month) we usually show: 1. Paid tickets 2. Paid accommodation 3. Paid studies or travel program 4. £1265/£1015 (London/Out of London) (It's might be more than required, but better to show more than less.)
Seems like my first info was outdated, as I found this:
https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/515465/Tier-_4-_of-the-points-based-system-v36.0.pdf
Applications submitted on or after 6 April 2012
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
Inner London - £1,000 per calendar month
Outer London and the rest of the UK - £800 per calendar month
Applications submitted on or after 12 November 2015
Study location - Monthly living cost requirement
In London - £1,265 per calendar month
Outside London - £1,015 per calendar month
page 5.
https://www.britishcouncil.org/sites/default/files/entry-clearance-and-immigration.pdf
The monthly maintenance requirements state that you must show you have
the required sum of money for maintenance in your account for a period
of 28 days (£1,000 per month for nine months in inner London and £800
per month for outer London or elsewhere in the UK. Up to a maximum of
nine months). This money must take the form of cash funds in the bank
(including savings accounts and current accounts, even when notice
must be given), a loan letter, or official financial or government
sponsorship available to you.
edited Apr 20 '16 at 10:34
answered Apr 16 '16 at 17:23
Viacheslav BakshaevViacheslav Bakshaev
1,337718
1,337718
1
Can you provide a reference to back up this claim:If you going to London you need to have £1000 for each month. Outside of London £800 for each month.
?
– JoErNanO♦
Apr 18 '16 at 15:43
£1,000 per month for London is significantly out-of-whack, they will surely refuse an application that aggressive and unrealistic on applicant credibility; did you make a transcription error? Or using out-of-date information?
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 18:47
@GayotFow I wish you had told me that before, I put down £1,500 and have already submitted my application, and am about to submit my documents on Thursday. I'll write a cover letter saying £1,500 is just the maximum I'd be spending/my father is willing to pay, and that it includes my air fare (which is £600ish) and include that with my application then... would that be alright? I will be staying for just over 2 weeks and I do intend to do some shopping too.
– Joel Damien
Apr 19 '16 at 20:24
The poster above wrote £1,000 per month (less if acco is provided). That's £33 per day. Compared to 'Lonely Planet's' cheapest estimate of £85 per day, it's ridiculously out-of-whack. I'm thinking the poster made a transcription error or something like that. It may not be a show-stopper for your application though
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 20:36
2
I answered as this answer said. 1. as 0 and 2., 3., 4. as £1500. I got my visa yesterday, flying later tonight. Thank you ALL for your help, I plan on making an article on how I answered all of the questions and what documents I included. Not sure where to post such a thing though.
– Joel Damien
May 6 '16 at 8:05
|
show 5 more comments
1
Can you provide a reference to back up this claim:If you going to London you need to have £1000 for each month. Outside of London £800 for each month.
?
– JoErNanO♦
Apr 18 '16 at 15:43
£1,000 per month for London is significantly out-of-whack, they will surely refuse an application that aggressive and unrealistic on applicant credibility; did you make a transcription error? Or using out-of-date information?
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 18:47
@GayotFow I wish you had told me that before, I put down £1,500 and have already submitted my application, and am about to submit my documents on Thursday. I'll write a cover letter saying £1,500 is just the maximum I'd be spending/my father is willing to pay, and that it includes my air fare (which is £600ish) and include that with my application then... would that be alright? I will be staying for just over 2 weeks and I do intend to do some shopping too.
– Joel Damien
Apr 19 '16 at 20:24
The poster above wrote £1,000 per month (less if acco is provided). That's £33 per day. Compared to 'Lonely Planet's' cheapest estimate of £85 per day, it's ridiculously out-of-whack. I'm thinking the poster made a transcription error or something like that. It may not be a show-stopper for your application though
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 20:36
2
I answered as this answer said. 1. as 0 and 2., 3., 4. as £1500. I got my visa yesterday, flying later tonight. Thank you ALL for your help, I plan on making an article on how I answered all of the questions and what documents I included. Not sure where to post such a thing though.
– Joel Damien
May 6 '16 at 8:05
1
1
Can you provide a reference to back up this claim:
If you going to London you need to have £1000 for each month. Outside of London £800 for each month.
?– JoErNanO♦
Apr 18 '16 at 15:43
Can you provide a reference to back up this claim:
If you going to London you need to have £1000 for each month. Outside of London £800 for each month.
?– JoErNanO♦
Apr 18 '16 at 15:43
£1,000 per month for London is significantly out-of-whack, they will surely refuse an application that aggressive and unrealistic on applicant credibility; did you make a transcription error? Or using out-of-date information?
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 18:47
£1,000 per month for London is significantly out-of-whack, they will surely refuse an application that aggressive and unrealistic on applicant credibility; did you make a transcription error? Or using out-of-date information?
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 18:47
@GayotFow I wish you had told me that before, I put down £1,500 and have already submitted my application, and am about to submit my documents on Thursday. I'll write a cover letter saying £1,500 is just the maximum I'd be spending/my father is willing to pay, and that it includes my air fare (which is £600ish) and include that with my application then... would that be alright? I will be staying for just over 2 weeks and I do intend to do some shopping too.
– Joel Damien
Apr 19 '16 at 20:24
@GayotFow I wish you had told me that before, I put down £1,500 and have already submitted my application, and am about to submit my documents on Thursday. I'll write a cover letter saying £1,500 is just the maximum I'd be spending/my father is willing to pay, and that it includes my air fare (which is £600ish) and include that with my application then... would that be alright? I will be staying for just over 2 weeks and I do intend to do some shopping too.
– Joel Damien
Apr 19 '16 at 20:24
The poster above wrote £1,000 per month (less if acco is provided). That's £33 per day. Compared to 'Lonely Planet's' cheapest estimate of £85 per day, it's ridiculously out-of-whack. I'm thinking the poster made a transcription error or something like that. It may not be a show-stopper for your application though
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 20:36
The poster above wrote £1,000 per month (less if acco is provided). That's £33 per day. Compared to 'Lonely Planet's' cheapest estimate of £85 per day, it's ridiculously out-of-whack. I'm thinking the poster made a transcription error or something like that. It may not be a show-stopper for your application though
– Gayot Fow
Apr 19 '16 at 20:36
2
2
I answered as this answer said. 1. as 0 and 2., 3., 4. as £1500. I got my visa yesterday, flying later tonight. Thank you ALL for your help, I plan on making an article on how I answered all of the questions and what documents I included. Not sure where to post such a thing though.
– Joel Damien
May 6 '16 at 8:05
I answered as this answer said. 1. as 0 and 2., 3., 4. as £1500. I got my visa yesterday, flying later tonight. Thank you ALL for your help, I plan on making an article on how I answered all of the questions and what documents I included. Not sure where to post such a thing though.
– Joel Damien
May 6 '16 at 8:05
|
show 5 more comments
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I don't know what you are seeing online, but on the paper form this (2) is worded as: "What money is available to you for your trip?"
– Michael Hampton
Apr 7 '16 at 22:27
@GayotFow So I should answer No 3 & 4 with £1,500 and No 1 & 2 with £0?
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:35
@GayotFow re-reading both your comments my understanding is that 1 should be £0 and 2, 3 and 4 should all be £1,500, correct? Thanks
– Joel Damien
Apr 7 '16 at 22:37
I would advise you to label every monetary value with currency, even when the question specifies the currency, just to be completely unambiguous. There has been at least one question on this site about a visa refusal that was at least in part based on a misunderstanding of the currency: travel.stackexchange.com/questions/62169/…
– phoog
Apr 25 '16 at 21:24
@phoog you can not input special characters such as '£' in the text box on the online application. I'm not sure you can even enter letters in the currency question text boxes.
– Joel Damien
Apr 30 '16 at 21:16