If you see my post on the states of an application the following are very important
R10 - usually 45 days - Meds are all happening simultaneously.
Eligibility - Status within 60 days - final results depends on where the LVO is.
GCMS help you in ensuring that your have things on track, but is a personal choice to order them or not. I recommend keeping a tab from R10. so 45 days is good about time. Some forum members suggest 30 days, but that is too early.
Then every 30 days to see when the eligibility is recommended passed and finally passed.
This is my suggestions, but you can see the trends in your month and request GCMS accordingly.
Guys I received an email stating that thr is a new messg in my account however the application number mentioned on the email is different than mine and also no messgs in my account. .. now this is confusing
Guys I received an email stating that thr is a new messg in my account however the application number mentioned on the email is different than mine and also no messgs in my account. .. now this is confusing
Sometimes people get PPR directly at NA. Sometimes the status changes the same day like IP2 in the morning and PPR in the afternoon.
You can't predict CIC
If you see my post on the stages of an application the following are very important
R10 - usually 45 days - Meds are all happening simultaneously.
Eligibility - Status within 60 days - final results depends on where the LVO is.
GCMS help you in ensuring that your have things on track, but is a personal choice to order them or not. I recommend keeping a tab from R10. so 45 days is good about time. Some forum members suggest 30 days, but that is too early.
Then every 30 days to see when the eligibility is recommended passed and finally passed.
This is my suggestions, but you can see the trends in your month and request GCMS accordingly.
Hello LegalFalcon, do you have any insight on how long London Visa Office takes to review eligibility? I ordered GCMS notes and got them early June. At that point it said Security was not started and Eligibility was not started but the notes contained all sorts of eligibility reviews with candidate passed so I assume it was assigned to the LVO to review again and do security.
I have ordered another set of GCMS notes which should come early July but it appears that London Visa Office isn't very fast in reviewing the files.
Guys I received an email stating that thr is a new messg in my account however the application number mentioned on the email is different than mine and also no messgs in my account. .. now this is confusing
Sometimes people get PPR directly at NA. Sometimes the status changes the same day like IP2 in the morning and PPR in the afternoon.
You can't predict CIC
Hello LegalFalcon, do you have any insight on how long London Visa Office takes to review eligibility? I ordered GCMS notes and got them early June. At that point it said Security was not started and Eligibility was not started but the notes contained all sorts of eligibility reviews with candidate passed so I assume it was assigned to the LVO to review again and do security.
I have ordered another set of GCMS notes which should come early July but it appears that London Visa Office isn't very fast in reviewing the files.
When the eligibility says "Candidate passed" is simple means that as per the candidate and the R10 the eligibility is passed. The eligibility is then looked into by the program analysts, after which the states goes to "recommended passed" or may say "review required" depending on what the file has and if there is an issue.
After this the file usually goes to LVO for outland applicants, where the agent will review the recommendation and make a final determination and this is when the eligibility will go to "passed".
If you see instant updates, that is good and your file seems to be progressing well. I don't have any statistics on specific office, and i don't believe in speculation as every file is different and will have a different officer reviewing it. Just keep a check on your file and soon you will be in Canada, even before you know it.