Mortgage statement and letter proving my wife can stay with me
#1
Forum Regular
Thread Starter
Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 36
Mortgage statement and letter proving my wife can stay with me
Hi,
I'm applying for my wife's permanent residence.
Me and my wife live together, the mortgage is in my name. The application says:
Letter signed by the owner of the property you live in stating that you have permission to live there
Just to confirm this letter is required by me, her husband? It seems something a landlord would need to write.
I'm also seeing on other forums that providing a land registry document is required, but the application just mentions a mortgage statement. Will a mortgage statement suffice?
Thanks
I'm applying for my wife's permanent residence.
Me and my wife live together, the mortgage is in my name. The application says:
Letter signed by the owner of the property you live in stating that you have permission to live there
Just to confirm this letter is required by me, her husband? It seems something a landlord would need to write.
I'm also seeing on other forums that providing a land registry document is required, but the application just mentions a mortgage statement. Will a mortgage statement suffice?
Thanks
#2
Lost in BE Cyberspace
Joined: May 2010
Location: San Diego, California
Posts: 9,618
Re: Mortgage statement and letter proving my wife can stay with me
This question gets asked a lot......
Some applicants who do not own the property they are going to live in (the sponsor husband does - t's in his name) say they own the property; others say neither.
Some provide the letter from the hubby, others don't. It's not something which is going to lead to a refusal.
Personally, if my hubby alone owned the property I'd do the permission letter - how long does it take? and you've covered yourself.
Yes a mortage statement will suffice - again some others also include the land registry document - up to you.
Some applicants who do not own the property they are going to live in (the sponsor husband does - t's in his name) say they own the property; others say neither.
Some provide the letter from the hubby, others don't. It's not something which is going to lead to a refusal.
Personally, if my hubby alone owned the property I'd do the permission letter - how long does it take? and you've covered yourself.
Yes a mortage statement will suffice - again some others also include the land registry document - up to you.