Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) - Travel (867) - Nairaland
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| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 12:45pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
Cyberknight:As we frequently do ☺️ Gracious, is Jedisco still here? Sure, would love to meet up if he's brave enough to venture out of his community lol |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by lavida001: 1:02pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
Goodenoch:You want me to leave so you can keep spewing your nonsense. Classic minion |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Eniakii: 1:10pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
Eniakii: |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goodenoch: 1:14pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
lavida001:Oya Oya you don catch me - I'm terrified of you. As you're here now I can't say what I want to say because I'm afraid of LavidaLoca. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Viruses: 7:38pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
lavida001:She said "A trade deal is rarely ever 50-50 but it does present significant opportunities which both parties are expected to leverage." And I said meaning "there was a deal and all parties negotiated to the best of their interests." "all parties are expected to leverage" vs "all parties negotiated to their best interest". Is that a biased deduction? |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by diggz: 9:02pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
Zahra29: ![]() Zahra29: |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Viruses: 9:36pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
Zahra29:It's sad if you genuinely feel this way and for that I apologise. But if it's self victimisation then it's really unfair. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 11:33pm On Aug 13, 2025 |
Viruses:It's cool, no hard feelings at all. And I apologise as well if any of my exchanges came across a bit rude. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goke7: 1:12am On Aug 14, 2025 |
diggz:It’s well ![]() |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by EJIOGBENIMI(m): 5:49am On Aug 14, 2025 |
Can someone please help have a look if I’d paid less tax for the year 2024/2025 tax year? HMRC said I underpaid by a certain amount(over 5k) and I have to sort it out by 31 Jan 2026. I am not convinced that I am owing up to this amount. I only had one job throughout the year(PAYE). I earned significantly higher than my predicted income for the year due to locum shifts from the same trust, and the salary increase (including arrears) paid to resident doctors last year. I have ran my payment information, p60 and every other figures through some online tools, including chatgpt, it’s pointing out to me not owing. I’ve rang hmrc, the lady that attended to me was not really patient enough to run me through how they arrived at this underpayment. She was only interested in how I can pay it off bit by bit. Can’t deduct it from my salary as my tax code has already been altered to accommodate the deduction for the underpayment for 2023/2024 tax year. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 8:02am On Aug 14, 2025 |
EJIOGBENIMI:If you have the HMRC online portal and login, they usually break down the whole earnings down in the letter they sent to you and how you under paid tax. In my experience, most of their calculations are usually correct when l compare it with my payslips for the tax year. I think you should do same thing. No need for chartgpt thing. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Goodenoch: 1:16pm On Aug 14, 2025 |
"There were an estimated 80,000 soldiers from Britain’s colonies including the Gambia, Ghana and Sierra Leone who sailed from west Africa to south Asia, initially heading to Burma (modern-day Myanmar) and joining the ranks of the 14th army. Nigerians made up more than half of the west African soldiers deployed to south-east Asia after 1943 as part of the British army’s 81st and 82nd (West Africa) Divisions. However, the allied commander Gen William Slim did not mention the African soldiers in his speech thanking the 14th army. Dr Alan Jeffreys, the museum’s head of collections and research, said: “To put it in numerical terms, in the 14th army there were 340,000 Indian soldiers, 100,000 British soldiers, 80,000 African soldiers. That number of Indian soldiers only increased, it was a predominantly Indian army by the end of 1945.” In Britain, the forces in south Asia became known as the “forgotten army” as the focus shifted to the threat of Nazism that was sweeping through Europe. Beyond Burma, which opens on 16 September, features medal groups awarded to Indian and African soldiers, as well as photographs and artwork. There is a focus on the reality of jungle warfare, the transformation of the Indian army, eventual victory and the campaign that continued during the 1940s in south-east Asia." Came across this exhibition. I'll be going to see it. Sounds like it'll be very interesting. https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2025/aug/14/london-museum-african-indian-troops-world-war-two-beyond-burma-forgotten-armies There's also this : https://www.theguardian.com/world/video/2015/aug/10/forgotten-army-world-war-two-west-african-soldiers-burma-video |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by EJIOGBENIMI(m): 6:46pm On Aug 14, 2025 |
ukay2:Thank you very much. It’s all clear now. I called them this morning and the representative took time to clarify my doubts. Apparently I lost the 12,570 tax free bonus. My tax code was calculated with code 0L, not 1257CUMUL due to crossing 125k. That was where I got it all wrong. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by Zahra29: 7:14pm On Aug 14, 2025 |
The state school that has the global highest entry of students to Oxbridge - even more than Eton - celebrates another amazing year of A level results. Brampton Manor is in what is regarded as a deprived area in London, most of the students are ethnic minorities and the principal is a Nigerian man - Dr Dayo Olukoshi Fantastic stuff 🎉 London students in general achieved the best A level results in the country. https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/brampton-manor-alevel-success-london-b1242919.html |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 7:54pm On Aug 14, 2025 |
EJIOGBENIMI:Yes, This is why you have family time than working extra time (locums) and you start to work for King Charles (HMRC)... ![]() |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by giselle237: 1:49pm On Aug 15, 2025 |
EJIOGBENIMI:What of all your allowable expenses? Why are you not claiming them? You are losing alot. Exams especially if in training, GMC, Royal college fees, MDU, indemnity fees, BMA, mileage, travel expenses not reimbursed by the trust, stethoscope, uniform purchase, uniform maintenance, charity donations eg to religious bodies etc You should register for self assessment and claim back all your professional fees in the best. Get an accountant if this is confusing. You can claim back up to 4 years ago. Hmrc does not know about your personal circumstances. You need to help yourself before they still take more money from you. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by elengine: 6:48pm On Aug 15, 2025 |
bigtt76:Hello Babajeje, have you got someone for this? If not, kindly drop me a message as I have a proposal for you. Cheers |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by ukay2: 10:12pm On Aug 15, 2025 |
giselle237:Very true.. I believe he/she should be claiming most of these things you have said. I do claim them yearly with HMRC... including the annual ISCP fees for us in surgical practice. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by elengine: 10:56pm On Aug 15, 2025 |
babajeje123:Can we discuss this? |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by mayowa94: 9:27am On Aug 16, 2025 |
The decision I have refused your application for a visit visa because I am not satisfied that you meet the requirements of paragraph(s) V4.2 – V4.6 of Appendix V: Immigration Rules for visitors for the reasons stated below. • You state that you intend to visit the UK for a period of 14 Days for the purpose of tourism and visiting your relatives in the UK. • You state that you are self-employed with an annual income of 5,000,000.00 NGN (£2,404.43, at an exchange rate of £1 = 2079.49 NGN as seen on oanda on 15/08/2025) and you have provided your personal savings bank statement (account ending in 7826) to demonstrate your financial circumstances. Whilst I acknowledge your supporting information, I note that the credits and balances in your personal account are not consistent with, and in fact exceed, your declared annual income. From our calculations, you have received more than your annual income in credits to this bank account in the month of May alone. As the total lodgement/credits figures are not in line with your stated annual income this consequently damages the credibility of your declared financial circumstances. Therefore, I am not satisfied you have given an accurate reflection of your current employment/financial circumstances. • You have provided your personal and corporate bank statements to demonstrate your financial circumstances. I note that your personal bank account is being used for business purposes. As this savings statement also represents funds used for the activities and running of your business, and you have not demonstrated that these funds are available to support anything else, this documentation, in isolation, does not demonstrate your personal financial situation. Given this, I am therefore led to doubt your reason for travel is as stated as I am not satisfied you have given an accurate reflection of your current financial circumstances in your country of residence. • Furthermore, you state you are self-employed and to demonstrate your circumstances, I note that you have provided a certificate of registration for the company. Whilst I acknowledge the documentation you have provided, the source of the funds in your personal account, as well as your self-employment circumstances, have been cast into doubt, given that Corporate Affairs Commission determined the status of your company to be ‘inactive’. I am therefore not satisfied that your employment and financial circumstances are as you have stated, which leads me to doubt your intentions of visiting the UK at this time. • These factors only serve to undermine the credibility of your application and raise concerns about your intentions to travel to the UK, as well as your incentives of returning to your country of residence. As such I am not satisfied that, if granted leave to enter as a visitor, you will comply with all the conditions attached to any such leave or that you will leave the UK on completion of the proposed visit. Please which actions should I take to correct this and how soon can I reapply? |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 12:34pm On Aug 16, 2025*. Modified: 7:59pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
lavida001:Hehehe. Lavidaloca lavida001:You keep telling yourself you're rallying folks to advocate for a better Nigeria but you're hardly doing that. You advocate that by investing or offering a superior argument - both of which are lacking. Which is also why you've been unable to get traction on the matter. I'd say this plainly- there are some discussions not worth having with certain folks. If you do not see yourself as equal with those you see around you, then what conversations would you be having on meatier aspects of development? Eitherway, I'd bite and ask- how do you intend to contribute towards development in Nigeria? |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 12:41pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
ReesheesuKnack:Hehe... was always skeptical the Rwanda reversal would boomerang and that's already happening. Its what tribal politics leads to - senseless policy reversals. Ultimately, there needs to be a good enough deterrent to prevent unsafe crossings. It'd be interesting to see how the Labour govt deals with this. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 12:58pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
Goke7:Hehehe.. wawulence |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 1:00pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
lavida001: lavida001:Not surprising that same bloke who believes himself to be inferior to others simply by virtue of being black if the one chorusing support for Z's ideas. Historical trends always repeat. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 1:10pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
EJIOGBENIMI:Hehe. I wonder if you could have paid into a SIPP to bringdoen your taxable income. At your income level, you get 40% tax rebate on SIPP contributions. Remember having that conversation with HMRC after some vigorous work and a the 'golden handshake'. The lady in a sweet calm voice said someting in the like of 'for every £1 you earn, you'd pay 50p + in taxes and... ' Told her no problem, I've taken note. Since then, I kept clear of that treshold. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by EJIOGBENIMI(m): 2:57pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
giselle237:I’ll claim everything. They’ve told me that there is a form available on gov.uk. Someone mentioned this to me at some point but I didn’t know how to go about it. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by EJIOGBENIMI(m): 3:00pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
jedisco:My own was “ The moment you crossed 100k, for every 2 pounds you earn, you paid 1 pound in tax” Can you please educate me more on SIPP? |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by EJIOGBENIMI(m): 3:32pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
ukay2:I didn’t chief, but I’ve gotten the form now. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by mayowa94: 3:55pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
mayowa94:please help 🙏 Note that the account submitted was a business not personal account that is definitely a mistake from the VO. |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by jedisco(m): 4:12pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
EJIOGBENIMI:Maybe its their usual line as many think the next treshold for tax increase is 125k forgeting you start losing your tax free allowance plus some other benefits (if eligible) at 100k. This is not even factoring in NI. It's difficult not to see it as working for the govt. A SIPP (self-invested pension plan) is pension you create and control where its invested. You can begin taking from it 10years before the state retirement age so at 57 now and chose what investments (st0cks, fvnds e.t.c it goes into). Also 25% upto a max of 250k is tax free and can be taken as a lump sum or tapered out. The rest is taxed at prevailing income rates at the time (taking into consideration all your income sources). The idea is that on retirement, you earn less and pay less tax. Also gives you the option to retire early Reason for the tax rebate and seeming generousity is that the govt looks to encourage folks to save for the future. Secondly, pensions are taken before tax - this is the main reason as the govt only calculates your tax after pensions. Salary sacrifice is similar but this time around taken before NI (so both employer and employee benefit). It's common with private employers. Across all pensions (incl NHS), you can put in a maximum of 60k pa or your taxable income (whichever is greater) into a pension. Say your taxable income is 30k, then your max is 30k but if 80k, your max becomes 60k. This your allowance can be carried over for 3 years I believe but the annual income cap still applies. The dilema for those working in the NHS is to know how much your NHS pension for that year is worth so you know what more you could put into a SIPP. Its tricky to calculate but can be found on your TRS which comes out later in the year. I tend to use my previous tax year TRS to gauge. So if I estimate my NHS pension for that year was 20k, I know I can put 40k. As an example, lets say you earn 120k but contribute 20k into a SIPP, the provider immediately requests 20% (i.e 4k) from the government. So in essense though you deposited 20k, you'd have 24k in your pension free to invest. As a higher rate payer, during your annual tax returns, they'd ask for private pension contributions. This is an important step many forget to do. You should then get a cheque or refund of the remaining 20% (i.e another 4k). Lastly, HMRC would calculate your taxable income as100k (i.e 120 - 20k pension contribution). So you'd still preserve your tax free allowance and other benefits e.g free child care (if eligible). So in essence, that extra 20k has given you 28k while preserving your tax free allowance and others |
| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by NewT123: 6:54pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
In 2024 alone remittances from Nigerians abroad amounted to over $20 billion. This shows that Nigerians abroad are contributing immensely to the Nigerian economy and it’s one of the ways we are making our country better even though we have jakpa
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| Re: Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) by lavida001: 7:37pm On Aug 16, 2025 |
jedisco:Grow up Doc. By the way How is Canada today. |
Living In The USA - Life Of An Immigrant Part 1 • Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 2) • Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 • 2 • 3 • 4
Canadian Express Entry/federal Skilled Workers Program - Connect Here Part 8 • Canadian Student Visa Thread Part 21 • USA Visit Visa Part 3

