LAST REVIEWED: MAY 2026
TL;DR- My Claim Group is recorded at Companies House under MY CLAIM GROUP LIMITED (number 16104112).
- Regulator: regulatory status not verified.
- Head office or principal address: Unit 3, Building 2, The Colony Wilmslow, Altrincham Road, Wilmslow, Cheshire SK9 4LY.
- Always verify current regulatory status on the IAA adviser finder or the SRA register at solicitors.lawsociety.org.uk before instructing.
Researching My Claim Group against primary public sources gives a clear baseline before any instruction. This article sets out the verified Companies House and regulator data for the firm as of 25 May 2026, together with the published practice areas and a checklist of the questions to ask before signing a client-care letter. The Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner has been renamed the Immigration Advice Authority. The IAA continues to regulate immigration advisers under Part V of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 and is sponsored by the Home Office. References to OISC registration on older firm websites and marketing materials should be read as referring to the same regime, now operating under the IAA name.
About My Claim Group
My Claim Group is registered at Companies House as MY CLAIM GROUP LIMITED under company number 16104112. The Companies House record shows an incorporation date of 27 November 2024 and a status of Active. The full legal name as registered is My Claim Group Limited. Companies House records can be searched directly at find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk to confirm current status, registered office and filing history.
The firm operates from registered office in Wilmslow as listed on Companies House; no further offices verified from public sources. The principal business address is given as Unit 3, Building 2, The Colony Wilmslow, Altrincham Road, Wilmslow, Cheshire SK9 4LY. Where a firm operates from more than one location, each office may host different teams; the firm's own website is the most reliable source for current local contact details.
My Claim Group Limited, Companies House number 16104112, was incorporated on 27 November 2024. It is a recent company, and clients considering instructing it for immigration matters should treat any marketing about immigration services with particular care: verify on the IAA adviser finder that the entity is registered to provide immigration advice for reward, check the SRA register if it claims to be a solicitors firm, and request a written client-care letter that names the regulator under which the matter will be conducted.
Regulatory Status of My Claim Group
The regulator for My Claim Group is the regulatory status not verified.
The Immigration Advice Authority replaced the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner as the statutory regulator for non-solicitor immigration advisers. The IAA continues to maintain a public adviser finder, currently signposted from gov.uk/find-an-immigration-adviser, where any prospective client can confirm the level and categories of authorisation for a registered adviser. References to OISC authorisation on older marketing materials should be read as referring to the same statutory regime, now operating under the IAA name.
For complaints and conduct concerns, the route depends on the regulator. SRA-regulated firms handle complaints internally first, then through the Legal Ombudsman for service complaints and the SRA for conduct issues. IAA-registered advisers handle complaints internally first, then through the IAA complaints scheme. Both routes are described in detail by the regulators and on gov.uk. The published outcomes give a sense of how each regulator approaches its caseload.
Fee Transparency
SRA-regulated firms are required by the SRA Transparency Rules to publish indicative pricing for immigration services on their website. The published rates typically distinguish between fixed-fee work, hourly billing for complex casework, and disbursements such as Home Office application fees and the Immigration Health Surcharge. My Claim Group operates under the regulatory framework described above and the firm's own website should be consulted for the most current published pricing.
Before instructing any UK immigration firm, the regulator-mandated client-care letter is the contractual baseline. It must set out the scope of work, the named caseworker, the supervision arrangements where relevant, the basis of charging including hourly rates or fixed fees, an estimate of total cost and a list of disbursements. A firm that cannot produce a written client-care letter and fee quote in a reasonable time is unlikely to handle the work transparently later.
Home Office application fees are paid directly to UK Visas and Immigration and are listed on gov.uk. They are separate from professional fees and from the Immigration Health Surcharge. A clear quote breaks down each component (professional fees, VAT, disbursements, and Home Office fees and charges) so that the client can see what is owed to whom and when.
What Clients Say
Independent client feedback on UK immigration firms is collected by Trustpilot, Google Reviews, ReviewSolicitors and similar aggregators. For My Claim Group a current Trustpilot listing is published at www.trustpilot.com/review/myclaimgroup.com. The live TrustScore, review volume and percentage breakdown can be read directly on that page. The Trustpilot interstitial security check made the TrustScore unavailable to automated retrieval on 25 May 2026, so the current numbers should be read live rather than quoted at a fixed point.
Reviews about service speed, communication and clarity of advice tend to be reliable signals. Reviews about case outcomes are less reliable in isolation because outcomes depend on the underlying facts and the strength of the legal merits. A firm cannot guarantee outcomes, and a reviewer's disappointment in a refused application may say more about the case than about the firm. The volume of reviews and the consistency of themes over time are more informative than any single rating.
Cross-check independent reviews against the regulator's own published record. A firm with a clean regulator record and a consistent body of positive independent feedback over several years is a stronger prospect than a firm with high review scores but a record of upheld complaints. The published outcomes of regulatory action by the SRA, the Legal Ombudsman and the IAA complaints scheme are the most reliable indicators of how seriously a firm takes service quality.
Immigration Services Offered
The immigration practice areas listed on the firm's own website include the company name and Wilmslow address do not by themselves confirm an immigration practice. The Companies House record for My Claim Group Limited (16104112) does not specify SIC codes consistent with legal services in the public summary reviewed for this article, and the company website was not reachable for content extraction when accessed on 25 May 2026. Each category requires the relevant authorisation, and for SRA-regulated firms the relevant practice rights are inherent in solicitor authorisation. For IAA-registered advisers the level (1, 2 or 3) and category (immigration, asylum or protection) determine what casework can lawfully be undertaken.
My Claim Group operates within the regulatory framework described above and confirms its practice areas through its own marketing material. Any prospective client should confirm at the initial consultation that the case falls squarely within the firm's current specialism and that the named caseworker has appropriate experience in the relevant visa or appeal category.
no immigration-specific accreditations were verified from public sources at the time of writing is what the firm's public-facing material currently states. The Lexcel mark is an external practice management standard granted by the Law Society. The Legal Aid Agency contract is granted following a tendering process and indicates that the firm has met specified quality standards in the relevant categories. These are layered on top of baseline regulatory authorisation, not substitutes for it.
How to Make a Complaint About My Claim Group
For IAA-registered advisers, complaints follow the firm's internal procedure first. If unresolved, complaints are escalated through the IAA complaints scheme, which can investigate professional conduct and impose sanctions ranging from warnings to removal from the register. The IAA publishes outcomes through its website.
Acting as an unregulated immigration adviser for reward remains a criminal offence under section 91 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999, punishable on conviction by imprisonment for up to two years, an unlimited fine, or both. The IAA enforcement function investigates reports of unauthorised practice and works with the police and the Crown Prosecution Service where prosecution is appropriate.
When raising a complaint, keep contemporaneous records (emails, file notes, recordings if lawful), the client-care letter and the receipts for any payments made. The complaint to the firm should be in writing and should describe specifically what went wrong, what the firm should do to put it right, and within what timescale. The firm's published complaints procedure should give the named complaints handler and the expected response timetable.
Questions to Ask Before Instructing My Claim Group
Confirm the named caseworker who will handle the matter, the name of the supervising solicitor or senior adviser, the relevant authorisation under the SRA or the IAA, and the level of experience in the specific visa or appeal category. The combination of named caseworker and named supervisor is a reasonable expectation and supports clear accountability.
Ask for the firm's recent caseload in the specific category of advice required. A firm that handles dozens of spouse visa refusals each year offers experience that a firm doing one or two cannot. Many firms will share indicative figures on request, and the answer is itself informative whether or not specific numbers are produced.
Request a written fee quote that separates professional fees, VAT, disbursements and Home Office application fees. Ask how the firm bills for unexpected developments such as a Home Office request for further information or a refusal triggering an appeal. A clear answer at the outset supports a transparent working relationship throughout the matter.
Confirm how the firm handles language interpretation if needed, what its turnaround commitments are for Home Office correspondence, and how documents are shared securely. UK immigration casework runs on short statutory deadlines, and the firm's process for meeting them should be clear before work begins.
Disclaimer
The information on this page is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Kaeltripton.com is not regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority or authorised by the Immigration Advice Authority (formerly the Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner). The registration numbers, addresses, and other firm data cited here were drawn from Companies House and the relevant firm websites on 25 May 2026 and may have changed since. Always verify a firm's current regulatory status on the official IAA or SRA register before instructing them.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Companies House number for My Claim Group?
The Companies House record shows MY CLAIM GROUP LIMITED under number 16104112, with an incorporation date of 27 November 2024 and a current status of Active, as accessed on 25 May 2026.
Is My Claim Group regulated by the SRA?
The firm's regulator is described as regulatory status not verified on its public website. Verification on the appropriate regulator's register at the time of instruction is recommended.
Where are My Claim Group's offices?
The firm's offices are described as: registered office in Wilmslow as listed on Companies House; no further offices verified from public sources.
How can I check My Claim Group on Trustpilot?
The Trustpilot listing is at www.trustpilot.com/review/myclaimgroup.com. The live TrustScore and review volume can be read directly on that page; the Trustpilot interstitial blocked automated retrieval at the time this article was written.
How do I complain about My Claim Group?
Use the firm's internal complaints procedure first. Unresolved complaints go to the IAA complaints scheme, accessible through the IAA pages on gov.uk.
What if I instructed My Claim Group and the firm has changed since?
Regulatory status, office addresses, and named individuals can change. The IAA and SRA registers reflect current authorisation, and Companies House reflects the current legal status of the entity. Verify all three at the point of instruction.
Where can I find an alternative if My Claim Group is not the right fit?
The official combined adviser finder at gov.uk/find-an-immigration-adviser searches both IAA-registered firms and SRA-regulated solicitors by postcode and area of advice, returning regulated alternatives in the same locality.
How This Was Verified
This article draws on the following primary sources, accessed on 25 May 2026:
- Companies House public search (find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk)
- GOV.UK Immigration Advice Authority organisation page (renamed from OISC)
- SRA public register (solicitors.lawsociety.org.uk)
- GOV.UK find an immigration adviser
- Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 (legislation.gov.uk)
- Companies House record for My Claim Group Limited 16104112
- Companies House record for MY CLAIM GROUP LIMITED 16104112
- www.trustpilot.com/review/myclaimgroup.com for live Trustpilot scores (page renders behind an AWS WAF challenge and was not retrievable to automated tools at the time of writing)