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Ausvisitor

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Everything posted by Ausvisitor

  1. When we came over we needed accomodation for 6 weeks before moving into our rental. We were perfect rental candidates, no specific location need, only one bed, no real budget constraint and no animals. We were looking in Sydney so not TAS but the issue around availability seems common everywhere right now. Probably the most important question for you is you say 2 dogs, now 2 well behaved schitzu are very different to 2 boisterous full grown dobermans (you get the picture).I'm not sure anyone would be keen to rent a property in good condition for just a month to a family with 2 large dogs, for a year or longer with a good deposit then maybe but too much risk for a small rental return
  2. The difference between Engineer and Technician is just a few letters and easy to achieve in the short term. However, the difference between Engineer and Technician is about $30k a year, are you ready to give that up and have to prove you are worth the promotion to engineer later?
  3. They seem legit enough, but I can't see why you'd waste your time with them when services like Wise money transfer exist and give near perfect exchange fees without having to email for a quote. Whilst the company you quote say they've helped 30,000 people move money abroad, Wise do this sort of number in a day so have a lot more experience. If Wise wasn't effectively market rates with a tiny service fee I might be tempted to look around but honestly unless you are talking millions of pounds being moved, the difference is likely to be miniscule
  4. In a similar vein to the OP, I don't want to start a discussion here (as it will descend it an unending argument) but if the OP really doesn't want the jab (as opposed to can't have it), the maybe AUS isn't the right country to migrate to. I say this not as a "why won't you have it" way, just on a factual statement. AUS is much more jab-positive than the UK, almost all mid/large size companies have "must be jabbed" employment clauses in their contracts, and many small companies do. It is really hard to get by without COVID vaccine over here. Of course when all said and done it is the OP's choice, but it's good to know what you are going to experience if you do try to get employment here without vaccination. Whatever you decide, it shouldn't affect your ability to pass (or not) the immigration medical
  5. Ausvisitor

    Uk Hmrc

    You would have, but without the filing it generally takes about 3 years for them to work through the backlog. Nowadays it's much quicker and they are working through backlogs from the last decade or so, many people are getting cheques for past overpayments sent back to them. That said I am looking forward to hitting submit on my final UK tax return and my first AUS one in the next few weeks. The UK owes me £5,700 in overpaid tax for last year and the AUD authorities about $13,500 for 21/22 tax year. Kerching ! ! !
  6. Ausvisitor

    Uk Hmrc

    But you would have got that anyway at the end of the year, you didn't get a refund for leaving you got a refund based on how much you earnt and how much tax had been withheld
  7. I'm sure this used to say mistress, or is my dyslexia playing up again? Certainly more salubrious the way I read it
  8. I would say yes, so long as you still live regionally and have already done a year working regionally since the grant of the 489
  9. Why, they want the best applicants, there is no guarantee that the best people are already in the queue so if we are doing migration for the good of Australia it stands to reason we leave the process open
  10. If your agent has been doing this for a while and is comfortable leaving the submission to the last day, I doubt this is the first time he has run over by a short amount, so he probably has more experience of whether it is an issue or not than anyone else Hope he's correct as it will save you a lot of worrying
  11. Maybe it needs to be updated to Ausresident now
  12. I need to add some more colour to my answer above as I've had a few PMs asking about it. The key part to the CISSP is the fact you need 5 years relevant experience to even take it, this is far more valuable than the actual qualification. I know many people (I have them working for people who work for me) who started the exam learning and took the exam in under 6 weeks from start to finish, and the average time for anyone we put through the certification if we need qualified people is 10 weeks. When you look at those numbers, why would we hire someone we don't know just because they have a piece of paper when we could instead spend less time and hassle just allowing one of our already trusted team to get certified (answer is simple - we wouldn't). I'm not saying there isn't value in the CISSP qualification, there undoubtedly is, but it isn't the silver bullet to unlocking employment that it is touted as. Simply put, it's nice if you've got it, but whether you have it or not would not influence a hiring decision. So you need to be good at everything else and not have the "attitude of entitlement" that seems to be attached to CISSP holders (for the avoidance of doubt, I too have this certification it has not changed what I do day to day one bit, I just needed it once for a client pre-requisite). Its certainly good to be able to prove you have these skills, but the market is awash with people that either have the cert or comparable experience and as a result the demand to hire those people is weak at the moment and that's if you can get through the visa process in the first place.
  13. Look at PTE as well, I know lots of degree educated Brits that mess up IELTS (including me) but PTE I got full marks in every section
  14. That's what I thought would be the case, however will they only start to consider at the end of the period, or would they look now with the view to only lending once the period was over (I suppose I could always ask a bank)
  15. I can second that, they are shocking. Much higher than the UK. Sydney and Melbourne rental prices right now make London seem cheap
  16. Hi So as a newbie to AUS my job comes with a probation period (as I suspect most do). Anyone know what sort of issues this might pose in raising a mortgage? Looking to borrow about $850k, all the bank calculators are happy with this based on salary levels and deposit to loan values but will the probation bit be the fly in the ointment? Cheers
  17. Yes it's gotten so bureaucratic nowadays I fully expect the next iteration of the rules to involve having to video tape your "encounters together" and attach it to the immi portal for the case officer to verify you are actually in a full relationship
  18. The relationship option is there, but it's been made harder by the burden of proof (over 12 months of proof you are in a defacto married relationship - i.e. doing "adult things" not just good friends)
  19. The problem you have is that Australia treats these roles as part of the IT grouping that has quotas (on top of the general visa quotas) so you need really high points totals to get a visa. You don't say what you think you would have in terms of visa points, but anything below 85 (higher if looking for a 189 visa) is unlikely to be successful. On another note, I've interviewed nearly 50 people in the last 6 weeks, almost all of them had those certifications, and we only made 2 job offers (despite having many open roles) and one of those didn't even have those quals. If you have a good job where you are (which you should with those certs) don't necessarily think it will be better here, I don't think Australia is as desperate for those skills as people think
  20. I gave them all, 3 degrees, 4 A levels, 3 AS levels and 11 GCSE. I don't remember the form not "working" easily. Yes it is a pain, but the choice is yours you can fill it in and maybe get offered a visa or roll the dice, ignore the question and maybe get knocked back for not giving them information that is in the public domain anyway
  21. Your tax documents p60 etc. will provide that information if you can't get from your employers
  22. Yes, whilst you would save some UK tax, when you then declare it in AUS, you are taxed as having received the whole 18k, you then offset the tax you paid in the UK (on the 14k) and pay the difference to the AUS taxman. So assuming a similar tax rate between the two countries (which isn't exactly the case but it's not massively different) you would end up paying tax in the whole 18k, 75% of the tax amount to the UK, and the other 25% to the AUS tax service
  23. Can totally agree with the above poster, northern Marrickville is really nice, a little noisy due to the planes, but that's a problem in most if the Sydney area
  24. Your mum can't attend the appointment for you, it has to be the applicant
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