Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,152,824 members, 7,817,409 topics. Date: Saturday, 04 May 2024 at 11:45 AM

Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant - Travel (426) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Travel / Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant (1307330 Views)

Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) / Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 2) / Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) ... (423) (424) (425) (426) (427) (428) (429) ... (750) (Go Down)

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by jessbonz(f): 7:50am On Nov 07, 2020
Hello, �Please does anyone have a list of employees that are licensed to sponsor immigrants for a tier 2 visa. I read that you must get a job offer before you can be issued a tier two visa.

Also, aside from that, what's the best way to move to UK. I'm currently studying for my masters in one of the Universities in the UK but via an online program. Thanks for your response �
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by fatima04: 8:11am On Nov 07, 2020
Bourne007:
I see 551 ọ. Azimo can't go that high jare


Lol, you are right oo. It was a special offer apparently, and once I used it, changed to 551 grin grin. Scammers.
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Lexusgs430: 8:39am On Nov 07, 2020
fatima04:


Lol, you are right oo. It was a special offer apparently, and once I used it, changed to 551 grin grin. Scammers.


Just use moneyfex or DT&T......... cheesy
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by DaDevin: 9:03am On Nov 07, 2020
I have naira for pounds (£200) please anyone
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Endlessgrace: 10:43am On Nov 07, 2020
Mamatukwas:


Ahhh thank you! First person to ever leave a Google review! Tiri gbosa for you sir kiss

Abeg i need the link to that google review. 5 gbosa always. You never disappoint

2 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Nobody: 10:49am On Nov 07, 2020
jessbonz:
Hello, �Please does anyone have a list of employees that are licensed to sponsor immigrants for a tier 2 visa. I read that you must get a job offer before you can be issued a tier two visa.

Also, aside from that, what's the best way to move to UK. I'm currently studying for my masters in one of the Universities in the UK but via an online program. Thanks for your response �


Just google tier 2 sponsors uk. But you have to checking once in while because they keep updating the list.

The organization you might looking at today might no longer be there in the next update.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Osed(m): 10:52am On Nov 07, 2020
I need 4000 pounds, I will give naira anybody interested?
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Tinyemeka(m): 10:53am On Nov 07, 2020
STENON:
"Extremely slow" Same thing I was told before moving here but the truth is Scotland is more than what most people presume it to be . In Scotland, life is easier and comfortable for raising up kids and having good family with moderate and comfortable lifestyle. London is more expensive and easier to spend life savings for paying bills

I think I'm totally buying your idea.

Take healthcare staff for instance. A nurse in Glasgow would earn almost similar pay with another in say Surrey (barring overtime pay, etc), but their expense profiles would be totally different.

I've seen 3BR flats being advertised for £600 PCM in same Glasgow, but you would hardly find such in towns close to London, not to talk of inside London itself. Lower council taxes, transport and so many other expenses still favour Scottish towns over those in Britain.

That's for people whose occupation are not heavily dependent on location sha. IT, Banking, business would of course gravitate towards big cities.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Tinyemeka(m): 11:16am On Nov 07, 2020
LagosismyHome:



I did some reading about nursing and was targeting it for some family members because of job security but personally I am not impressed with the salary mainly because I see what their colleagues in the US are collecting. It is shockingly low in UK for the effort needed

Na porting tins.

Most Nigerian nurses I know personally who've recently moved to practice in the UK are just marking time to port over to the US. Or are waiting to accumulate sufficient CRS scores to move to Canada.

A fresh BSN graduate in the UK NHS starts on Band 5 (usually). £25,900 - 30,600.

Meanwhile see what Glassdoor says a Registered nurse in Alberta Health services earns... undecided

P.S. I stand to be corrected o and would welcome any comment with factual counter opinion. Na browse I browse am. I'm not even a nurse. lipsrsealed

3 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Chukwuka16: 11:35am On Nov 07, 2020
Lexusgs430:



You snatched our wife....... Who is this lucky lady.......... wink

Ah baba, MUM is the word. I can't jeopardise my akara and akamu this morning grin
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by fatima04: 11:37am On Nov 07, 2020
Tinyemeka:


Na porting tins.

Most Nigerian nurses I know personally who've recently moved to practice in the UK are just marking time to port over to the US. Or are waiting to accumulate sufficient CRS scores to move to Canada.

A fresh BSN graduate in the UK NHS starts on Band 5 (usually). £25,900 - 30,600.

Meanwhile see what Glassdoor says a Registered nurse in Alberta Health services earns... undecided

P.S. I stand to be corrected o and would welcome any comment with factual counter opinion. Na browse I browse am. I'm not even a nurse. lipsrsealed


You are right. Add Australia to the list. The major difference between US and UK is the latter being a government employer and the former is mostly private employer. Hence a higher salary range.

But the truth is its easier to get a job in the UK in medical profession than those countries. Imagine registering as a nurse in Texas and you want to move to Newyork, you have to register with that state all over again. Meanwhile NHS is NHS.

Don't even start on the whole Nclex exam process again...

The money gap is crazy, I really do feel Nurses are greatly underpaid in this country but ofcourse some too they chop well well.
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Chukwuka16: 11:47am On Nov 07, 2020
Aphrodite007:


Yeah you hit the nail on the head. Me I was even talking from the perspective that MSC doesn’t allow you to practice, it’s BSC that does— especially for specialised courses like Eng, Med, Nursing, etc

Actually remove ENG courses from that list. I think only medical based courses are that strict now and maybe law practice. I've seen non engineers with unusual first degrees jump into an engineering masters programme and then an engineering role and do some qualifications and achieve CENg status! The reverse is also the same and ongoing. Some even get into engineering roles with basic science qualifications and voila they become chartered. In fact someone (a Nigerian and working in Nigeria) I know achieved his CENg status here in the UK and doesn't have a first degree! He's a PhD holder but followed other means.

For the reverse, it's just having skill set in qualitative and quantitative analysis a well as theoretical understanding of key themes. The work environment is really crazy. I'm an engineer by training with a PhD in CS and yet my current role is purely social science/humanities/law.

What seems to be selling within the sciences, engineering and humanities now is skill rather than degree qualification. Of course all these are majorly happening outside of NIGERIA.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Chukwuka16: 12:00pm On Nov 07, 2020
fatima04:


You are right. Add Australia to the list. The major difference between US and UK is the latter being a government employer and the former is mostly private employer. Hence a higher salary range.

But the truth is its easier to get a job in the UK in medical profession than those countries. Imagine registering as a nurse in Texas and you want to move to Newyork, you have to register with that state all over again. Meanwhile NHS is NHS.

Don't even start on the whole Nclex exam process again...

The money gap is crazy, I really do feel Nurses are greatly underpaid in this country but ofcourse some too they chop well well.

Sincerely speaking, the UK is setting itself up for a repeat of the French Revolution.

How someone will qualify as a Nurse and work crazy shifts and be paid under £35K or slightly more is baffling. If there is anything covid-19 has done for the UK - it is helping to stress test the system and expose the significant inequalities and injustice and POVERTY prevalent in this country. Why the current conservative government cannot see a revolution simmering in the shadows is unbelievable. A supposed major superpower and still battling with Food Poverty.

£12bn for Serco to do test, track and trace and £bns more for supposed contracts on PPEs and wasted £400m in a bankrupt satellite company and many more wastages and yet she can't agree on a standard living wage. Look out how food banks are running out of supplies and how overloaded DWP is becoming with claimants for UBI and parliamentarians are arguing about libertarianism and egalitarianism and all what's not.

By the time the system gets stuffed and the UK can't generate more wealth (especially considering the uncertainty of Brexit coupled with the massive hit from covid-19 and the potential for Joe Biden to win and thus frustrate UK out of the EU without a deal), it may be said years to come - "Behold, there lies the ruins of the once great UK. A great superpower was she. Alas, her walls are broken and storehouses emptied."

Caveat - it doesn't mean people can't leverage the UK for the foreseeable future. She is still miles and miles better than Nigeria especially for young people for now.

5 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Pearlyfaze: 12:05pm On Nov 07, 2020
Tinyemeka:


Na porting tins.

Most Nigerian nurses I know personally who've recently moved to practice in the UK are just marking time to port over to the US. Or are waiting to accumulate sufficient CRS scores to move to Canada.

A fresh BSN graduate in the UK NHS starts on Band 5 (usually). £25,900 - 30,600.

Meanwhile see what Glassdoor says a Registered nurse in Alberta Health services earns... undecided

P.S. I stand to be corrected o and would welcome any comment with factual counter opinion. Na browse I browse am. I'm not even a nurse. lipsrsealed



Make we use T2 enter UK fes fes. Collect ILR/Citizenship na 7yrs plan be that, then port to Canada and also collect their Citizenship.

But make we just commot legally fes. Efri other thing will sort itself out.

I come in peace. BTW the information here is top notch. You are all doing well Oooin.
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Bourne007(m): 12:10pm On Nov 07, 2020
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/register-of-licensed-sponsors-workers

jessbonz:
Hello, �Please does anyone have a list of employees that are licensed to sponsor immigrants for a tier 2 visa. I read that you must get a job offer before you can be issued a tier two visa.

Also, aside from that, what's the best way to move to UK. I'm currently studying for my masters in one of the Universities in the UK but via an online program. Thanks for your response �

2 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Chukwuka16: 12:17pm On Nov 07, 2020
Tinyemeka:


Na porting tins.

Most Nigerian nurses I know personally who've recently moved to practice in the UK are just marking time to port over to the US. Or are waiting to accumulate sufficient CRS scores to move to Canada.

A fresh BSN graduate in the UK NHS starts on Band 5 (usually). £25,900 - 30,600.

Meanwhile see what Glassdoor says a Registered nurse in Alberta Health services earns... undecided

P.S. I stand to be corrected o and would welcome any comment with factual counter opinion. Na browse I browse am. I'm not even a nurse. lipsrsealed

Agreed that the salary may be miserable. In fact, I'm at loss for a better word. However, on the flip side, some folks may just be ok with that salary considering other benefits they derive from the UK.

For some perhaps the proximity to home and the relative abundance of Nigerians here in the UK (per sq m of developed land) with the constant owambe parties and jolly rice may be appealing enough reasons.

For others it may be the natural attachment between Nigerians and the UK considering they were our colonial masters. I grew up wanting nothing more than to visit the UK. I needed to see Great Britain and then visit England and then port over to London grin grin grin

When you cost these values and add them to the salary, you begin to see that they earn more here in the UK than perhaps in Canada. Salary isn't the only income to consider, there's also the emotional cost!

4 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Mamatukwas: 12:44pm On Nov 07, 2020
Endlessgrace:


Abeg i need the link to that google review. 5 gbosa always. You never disappoint

Ahhh!! Thank you oh! Really appreciate the review! Kilzes kiss
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by omopapa: 1:28pm On Nov 07, 2020
The “free” NHS service and the bolded is why I’m part of the some

Chukwuka16:


Agreed that the salary may be miserable. In fact, I'm at loss for a better word. However, on the flip side, some folks may just be ok with that salary considering other benefits they derive from the UK.

For some perhaps the proximity to home and the relative abundance of Nigerians here in the UK (per sq m of developed land) with the constant owambe parties and jolly rice may be appealing enough reasons.

For others it may be the natural attachment between Nigerians and the UK considering they were our colonial masters. I grew up wanting nothing more than to visit the UK. I needed to see Great Britain and then visit England and then port over to London grin grin grin

When you cost these values and add them to the salary, you begin to see that they earn more here in the UK than perhaps in Canada. Salary isn't the only income to consider, there's also the emotional cost!
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by omopapa: 1:30pm On Nov 07, 2020
I have £ for sale

DaDevin:
I have naira for pounds (£200) please anyone
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by spacyzuma(m): 1:35pm On Nov 07, 2020
jessbonz:
Hello, �Please does anyone have a list of employees that are licensed to sponsor immigrants for a tier 2 visa. I read that you must get a job offer before you can be issued a tier two visa.

Also, aside from that, what's the best way to move to UK. I'm currently studying for my masters in one of the Universities in the UK but via an online program. Thanks for your response �

Work Visas (Tier 2 and 5)= https://gov.uk/government/publications/register-of-licensed-sponsors-workers
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Tinyemeka(m): 2:34pm On Nov 07, 2020
Pearlyfaze:



Make we use T2 enter UK fes fes. Collect ILR/Citizenship na 7yrs plan be that, then port to Canada and also collect their Citizenship.

But make we just commot legally fes. Efri other thing will sort itself out.

I come in peace. BTW the information here is top notch. You are all doing well Oooin.

grin grin grin

Traitor like you!

Where's the patriotism? So you no wan die for your (adopted) kontri abi? tongue

But if you spend 7 years for UK, which levels you wan use enter Canny? For each year above 32 years (abi 33?) of your age, na -5 points from your CRS o. Shey you know?
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Tinyemeka(m): 2:36pm On Nov 07, 2020
Chukwuka16:


Agreed that the salary may be miserable. In fact, I'm at loss for a better word. However, on the flip side, some folks may just be ok with that salary considering other benefits they derive from the UK.

For some perhaps the proximity to home and the relative abundance of Nigerians here in the UK (per sq m of developed land) with the constant owambe parties and jolly rice may be appealing enough reasons.

For others it may be the natural attachment between Nigerians and the UK considering they were our colonial masters. I grew up wanting nothing more than to visit the UK. I needed to see Great Britain and then visit England and then port over to London grin grin grin

When you cost these values and add them to the salary, you begin to see that they earn more here in the UK than perhaps in Canada. Salary isn't the only income to consider, there's also the emotional cost!

No doubt!

Home is where your heart lies.
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Tinyemeka(m): 2:46pm On Nov 07, 2020
fatima04:


You are right. Add Australia to the list. The major difference between US and UK is the latter being a government employer and the former is mostly private employer. Hence a higher salary range.

But the truth is its easier to get a job in the UK in medical profession than those countries. Imagine registering as a nurse in Texas and you want to move to Newyork, you have to register with that state all over again. Meanwhile NHS is NHS.

Don't even start on the whole Nclex exam process again...

The money gap is crazy, I really do feel Nurses are greatly underpaid in this country but ofcourse some too they chop well well.

Oh yes!
Extremely easy and that's why the UK is most times the first option for nurses who wish to emigrate.

The government on its part is rather content with importing overseas talent from relatively poorer countries to fill in those jobs that its own citizens have overlooked, instead of increasing the pay. If the govt should increase the NHS pay bands, do you think the sector will still experience the talent shortage it's currently facing? For how long can they keep on importing nurses and doctors?

Something is wrong somewhere.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Aphrodite007(f): 3:10pm On Nov 07, 2020
Chukwuka16:


Actually remove ENG courses from that list. I think only medical based courses are that strict now and maybe law practice. I've seen non engineers with unusual first degrees jump into an engineering masters programme and then an engineering role and do some qualifications and achieve CENg status! The reverse is also the same and ongoing. Some even get into engineering roles with basic science qualifications and voila they become chartered. In fact someone (a Nigerian and working in Nigeria) I know achieved his CENg status here in the UK and doesn't have a first degree! He's a PhD holder but followed other means.

For the reverse, it's just having skill set in qualitative and quantitative analysis a well as theoretical understanding of key themes. The work environment is really crazy. I'm an engineer by training with a PhD in CS and yet my current role is purely social science/humanities/law.

What seems to be selling within the sciences, engineering and humanities now is skill rather than degree qualification. Of course all these are majorly happening outside of NIGERIA.

You’re absolutely right. I only put Eng because I wanted to highlight the difficulty in being called an Engr without that first degree— I am aware that abroad Eng allows people to write exams to get that title. But it’s not so in Nigeria, Coren won’t let you in with an Eng first degree.

All join sha!
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Aphrodite007(f): 3:12pm On Nov 07, 2020
LagosismyHome:



I did some reading about nursing and was targeting it for some family members because of job security but personally I am not impressed with the salary mainly because I see what their colleagues in the US are collecting. It is shockingly low in UK for the effort needed

As in!

I think salaries are generally lower in the UK. I see what my colleagues are collecting in the US and Can. I personally would advise teaching over nursing unless it’s the persons passion.
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Hunnybee: 3:27pm On Nov 07, 2020
fatima04:


You are right. Add Australia to the list. The major difference between US and UK is the latter being a government employer and the former is mostly private employer. Hence a higher salary range.

But the truth is its easier to get a job in the UK in medical profession than those countries. Imagine registering as a nurse in Texas and you want to move to Newyork, you have to register with that state all over again. Meanwhile NHS is NHS.

Don't even start on the whole Nclex exam process again...

The money gap is crazy, I really do feel Nurses are greatly underpaid in this country but ofcourse some too they chop well well.

There's the compact license now, which allows you to practice in all 34 states who are members without having to go through the stress of registration all over again

2 Likes

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by TheGuyFromHR: 4:21pm On Nov 07, 2020
Tinyemeka:


Oh yes!
Extremely easy and that's why the UK is most times the first option for nurses who wish to emigrate.

The government on its part is rather content with importing overseas talent from relatively poorer countries to fill in those jobs that its own citizens have overlooked, instead of increasing the pay. If the govt should increase the NHS pay bands, do you think the sector will still experience the talent shortage it's currently facing? For how long can they keep on importing nurses and doctors?

Something is wrong somewhere.

Indefinitely.
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by Pearlyfaze: 4:47pm On Nov 07, 2020
Tinyemeka:


grin grin grin

Traitor like you!

Where's the patriotism? So you no wan die for your (adopted) kontri abi? tongue

But if you spend 7 years for UK, which levels you wan use enter Canny? For each year above 32 years (abi 33?) of your age, na -5 points from your CRS o. Shey you know?


By my 7th year in the UK I go don become baddest for Data Science. I dey use all the suffering vex come. Na only Canny go relax their rules to favour the Badt guy. But if canny nor gree I will go far Australia go collect their own. Las las na Tri citizenship be the plan.

Biko Patriotism for one side fes.
Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by fatima04: 7:08pm On Nov 07, 2020
Hunnybee:


There's the compact license now, which allows you to practice in all 34 states who are members without having to go through the stress of registration all over again

Thats great and makes better sense.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by omopapa: 3:59am On Nov 08, 2020
Its really been a long time as Abideen is now the new president elect

Welcome back bro, go and sin no more cheesy

RalphJean:
I don chop 1 week ban.
Crime wey I commit Na sake of say I talk something wey 1 person, 1 person no like.
Na so e carry ban knack me akpako.

Good to be back.

Last time I was here, Donald John Trump was President. That gives you idea how long ago that was.

Well, I’m happy to be back. I pray that the gods grant me grace to be able to not call out person(s) on this thread.
Amen.

1 Like

Re: Living In The Uk/life As A UK Immigrant by assumpta1: 8:30am On Nov 08, 2020
Oh thank you. Does the same thing apply to the dependants?
Also what if a dependant is able to switch to tier 2, what route will that be? Sorry if I’m asking too many questions but the links don’t provide answers to my questions.
Bourne007:
Say you send 3 years on tier 4 and 2 years post study, though you have spent 5 years but doesn't lead to settlement.

If you however switch to various visas completing 10 years (long residence) then tier 4/post study visas can be used cos you have stayed legally

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/indefinite-leave-to-remain-calculating-continuous-period-in-uk

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/long-residence




(1) (2) (3) ... (423) (424) (425) (426) (427) (428) (429) ... (750)

Uk Student Visa/tier 4 Pbs - Your Questions Answered Part 5 / Canadian Express Entry/federal Skilled Workers Program - Connect Here Part 9 / Uk Student Visa/tier 4 Pbs - Your Questions Answered Part 3

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 71
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.