Upvote:0
I heard from people, for fully sponsored applicants, they only need to put amount that they will pay for personally on the "how much money are you planning to spend on your visit?" question.
So, in your case, you just need to put 0 on the 3rd question. And put the total cost on the next question about the money that sponsor will be paying towards.
Actually this question is prone to be misinterpreted though. On my application, I also did the same thing as you did but still waiting for the outcome.
How about your visa, did you manage to get it?
Upvote:1
1000.00 GBP I plan on spending 2 weeks, so does quoting this amount makes sense?
That seems quite low to me: about 70 GBP/day. It might be worth breaking it down into accommodation, food, transport, admission to the places you plan to visit, and other shopping (souvenirs, gifts, batteries for your camera, etc).
Upvote:4
These are the issues I see:
- You didn't say the purpose of your visit. This needs to be true, and it must make sense that your sponsor would spend £1000 for that purpose.
- You will be expected to name your sponsor and their relation to you (e.g. friend, brother, mother, uncle, etc.).
- You need to submit your own bank statements and proof of sources of income even if you have little income, in addition to your sponsor's bank statements and proof of sources of income.
- Your sponsor should not transfer money to you before you receive the visa stamp. Doing so almost guarantees a visa refusal.
- You are not guaranteed to receive a visa even if you do everything right. It's very difficult for people in your circumstances (university student with little income and savings) to receive a visa. You can only make your application as good as you can possibly do. If you don't have the ability to make a strong application, it may be better to not apply, so that you do not risk having a visa refusal on your record that may harm your ability to receive visas later in life.