Free Visitor Visa Support
Key Documents Required
To apply for your UK visitor visa, please ensure you have the following documents ready:
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NMC Decision Letter confirming your eligibility to sit the OSCE
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OSCE Booking Confirmation from an approved test centre
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Letter of Acceptance from My Nurse’s Life confirming your enrolment in OSCE training
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Proof of Financial Support, such as recent bank statements, a sponsor letter, or payslips
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Proof of UK Accommodation for the duration of your stay
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Valid Passport with a minimum of six months’ remaining validity
We offer a free Visa support service, don’t pay companies to help, this is not necessary or moral to charge people to assist, we give free information and assistance and that is what gives us the authenticity above our competitors who will try to keep you in their system. They are charging sometimes and breaching the UK law by doing so. All the advice is publicly available, but having a reputable company help navigate can help. My Nurse’s Life will help you with process and take the strain away from your application.
It is not automatically illegal to charge for help with a UK visa application, but it depends on what help is being provided and who is providing it.
Here’s the clear breakdown
When charging for visa help IS legal in the UK
You can charge if the service is limited to administrative or non-advice support, such as:
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Helping someone fill in forms using information they provide
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Document checking (making sure required documents are included)
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Booking appointments
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Explaining publicly available information (e.g. Home Office guidance)
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Providing templates or checklists
No special licence is required for this level of help.
When charging IS illegal
It becomes illegal if someone:
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Gives immigration advice
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Advises on visa routes, eligibility, refusals, appeals, or strategy
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Communicates with the UK Home Office on the applicant’s behalf
Unless they are properly authorised, charging for this is unlawful.
Authorised advisers must be:
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Regulated by the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner (OISC), or
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A UK-qualified solicitor or barrister
⚠️ Why this matters (seriously)
If an unauthorised person charges for immigration advice:

