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Dazken Amac

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  1. PASSPORT VALIDITY BEFORE APPLYING FOR CITIZENSHIP

    I was going through the website for requirements for eligibility and the documents required. Was just wondering is there any specific period ones passport has to be valid before applying for citizenship. If a passport is valid for 6 months of a PR holder will that be considered a point for rejecting his application.

  2. Congrats to all you guys who have got their citizenship.. I was going through the website for requirements for eligibility and the documents required. Was just wondering is there any specific period ones passport has to be valid before applying for citizenship. If a passport is valid for 6 months of a PR holder will that be considered a point for rejecting his application.
  3. hey captain R .. long time just wanted to know how did the special residence requirement turn out for you.. I intend to apply on the same lines
  4. Hi please see below link directly from the govt website. His time would be counted but his families time would not be counted.. He requires a seatime of 24 months. while he is away his family needs to stay in oz to be able to apply for their citizenship.. alternatively they can seek extension for their pr or come on a family visa once he has his citizenship. https://www.homeaffairs.gov.au/trav/citi/appl/what-documents-do-you-need/variation-to-the-residence-requirement quote: Requirement: To meet the special resident requirement, you must have been living in Australia on a valid visa which allows permanent residency for two years immediately before you apply. During those two years you must have been lawfully present in Australia for at least 180 days, including at least 90 days of that time in the 12 months immediately before lodging your application. If you have been engaged in particular kinds of work and can provide evidence from an employer that shows you have worked in that occupation for at least a total of two out of the past four years and you were required to travel outside Australia for that work, the following special residence requirement may apply to you.Requirement: You must have held a valid Australian visa for four years immediately before applying, including one year as a permanent resident immediately before applying.You must also have been living in Australia for a total of 16 months (480 days) during the four years before you apply, with at least four months (120 days) of that time in the year immediately before your application. The following is list of relevant occupations for this special residence requirement: a member of the crew of a ship or aircraft
  5. Hi please see below link directly from the govt website. His time would be counted but his families time would not be counted.. He requires a seatime of 24 months. https://www.homeaffairs.gov.au/trav/citi/appl/what-documents-do-you-need/variation-to-the-residence-requirement quote: Requirement: To meet the special resident requirement, you must have been living in Australia on a valid visa which allows permanent residency for two years immediately before you apply. During those two years you must have been lawfully present in Australia for at least 180 days, including at least 90 days of that time in the 12 months immediately before lodging your application. If you have been engaged in particular kinds of work and can provide evidence from an employer that shows you have worked in that occupation for at least a total of two out of the past four years and you were required to travel outside Australia for that work, the following special residence requirement may apply to you.Requirement: You must have held a valid Australian visa for four years immediately before applying, including one year as a permanent resident immediately before applying.You must also have been living in Australia for a total of 16 months (480 days) during the four years before you apply, with at least four months (120 days) of that time in the year immediately before your application. The following is list of relevant occupations for this special residence requirement: a member of the crew of a ship or aircraft
  6.  

    <p> </p>

    <p><p>Hello Sir,</p></p>

    <p><p>I saw your message about PCC from Panama ,hongkong,liberia,bahamas. I have applied to Norway and Marshall Islands.It was really good to know that you got your PCC's.</p></p>

    <p><p>I am curious to know whether you got it in mail or by post.Did you pay any fees for it?</p></p>

    <p><p>My Marshall Islands mail seems so have come to a stop.delivery was attempted but the premises were closed.</p></p>

    <p> </p>

     

  7. I think may be @ Andrew from vista finance may be able to help Best regards Nick
  8. Browse through the threads. .. you will find plenty. .. Best regards Nick
  9. Because th visa is an e visa and if the country I am flying from doesn't have the information as the visa is not stamped on my passport. . They may cause issues. . Best regards Nick
  10. Hi I have been on a 189 visa in australia since July. . I need to get out if the country for around 6 months and then come back. .. Will there be any problem at the immigration 6 months later when I try to re enter ... As the stamping of visas in the passports has stopped I hope they would have everything on their system.. Best regards Nick
  11. As long as you do your repayments right I don't see any reason why the banks will bother you... In fact I will suggest the earlier you pay your loan the faster you get them off your backs... Rent it out but open a separate account where the rent chq would be deposited and then transfer it to your mortgage account so there's less chance of anyone knowing that you have rented... Moreover you are moving in April 2017... till then you will have only 1 month to go to meet the criteria of the buy to let option... After that you are safe Best regards Nick
  12. I like your approach. .. almost similar to mine... but I was thinking more on the lines of stocks.. or mutual fund investments... Income protection sounds good will definitely give it a thought as it sounds a bit more of a practical approach Best regards Nick
  13. The rebate and surcharge levels applicable from 1 April 2016 to 31 March 2017 are: [TABLE=width: 629] [TR] [TH]Singles Families[/TH] [TH]≤$90,000 ≤$180,000[/TH] [TH]$90,001-105,000 $180,001-210,000[/TH] [TH]$105,001-140,000 $210,001-280,000[/TH] [TH]≥$140,001 ≥$280,001[/TH] [/TR] [TR] [TD=colspan: 5]Rebate[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD][/TD] [TD]Base Tier [/TD] [TD]Tier 1 [/TD] [TD]Tier 2 [/TD] [TD]Tier 3 [/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD]< age 65[/TD] [TD]26.791%[/TD] [TD]17.861%[/TD] [TD]8.930%[/TD] [TD]0%[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD]Age 65-69[/TD] [TD]31.256%[/TD] [TD]22.326%[/TD] [TD]13.395%[/TD] [TD]0%[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD]Age 70+[/TD] [TD]35.722%[/TD] [TD]26.791%[/TD] [TD]17.861%[/TD] [TD]0%[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD=colspan: 5]Medicare Levy Surcharge[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD]All ages[/TD] [TD]0.0%[/TD] [TD]1.0%[/TD] [TD]1.25%[/TD] [TD]1.5%[/TD] [/TR] [/TABLE] [h=4][/h]Single parents and couples (including de facto couples) are subject to family tiers. For families with children, the thresholds are increased by $1,500 for each child after the first. The income thresholds are indexed and will remain the same to 30 June 2021. [h=4][/h][h=4]Currently, you have to pay the surcharge if you are:[/h] a single person with an annual taxable income for MLS purposes greater than $88,000 in the 2013-14 financial year or $90,000 in the 2014-15 or 2015-16 financial years; or a family or couple with a combined taxable income for MLS purposes greater than $176,000 in the 2013-14 financial year or $180,000 in the 2014-15 or 2015-16 financial years. The family income threshold increases by $1,500 for each dependent child after the first; and do not have an approved hospital cover with a registered health fund. You must also pay the surcharge if you are a prescribed person with a taxable income over the threshold, and have any dependents who are not prescribed persons and who are not covered by an approved health cover policy as described above. This means if you are a family, have a combined income of more than $180,000 in 2015-16, and don't have hospital cover for you, your partner, and your children, you will pay the MLS. [h=4]You must meet one of the following requirements to avoid the Medicare Levy Surcharge:[/h] your taxable income for MLS purposes is below the income threshold (see above), your taxable income for MLS purposes is over the income threshold and you have hospital insurance (see below) for you and all of your dependents with a registered health fund, with a total yearly front-end deductible or excess no greater than $500 for singles or $1,000 for families/couples, you are normally exempt from the Medicare levy because you are a prescribed person and you do not have any dependents. Your income level is not considered in this case, you are a high-income earner who had already purchased a hospital insurance product with a total yearly front-end deductible or excess greater than $500 for singles or $1,000 for families/couples, on or before 24 May 2000. In this case you will continue to be exempt from the surcharge as long as you maintain continuous membership under the same hospital treatment policy.
  14. That was excellent advise ... I will definitely look out for those points. .. I already have my ambulance cover with ambulance Victoria. . Best regards Nick
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