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Firstly congratulations on your little baby girl.... And congratulations on a succesful return back to the UK with your husband.emilylpl wrote:Hi Guys, I really just felt compelled to tell anyone whos interested about my experience. While filing for my husbands visa I did have a glance over some forums for ideas and advice..... BIG mistake. I just want people to know it really isnt as difficult as its made out to be. PLEASE ignore some absolute horror stories on here. If I had honestly took to heart half of the replies to peoples questions, I might of died from stress. I think these forums can be disheartening and PLEASE remember every case is different.
My experience: We provided all our ID etc info fine BUT when it came to financial info, we just couldnt. I am British and I am currently living in the states with my American husband. I dont work, I cant provide 3 months bank statements, nor do I have a job to return to. Not ideal, but thats the facts. My husband has a good well paid job here, we do ok for money, but obviously he is leaving it. He does not have a job in the uk to go to either. And you know what... weve had so much fun recently, we dont even have savings. Moving back to the UK was totally unforseen and very much last minute and unplanned. Basically, Im pregnant, I want my family and we want to be able to save enough money to come back to the states in a few years and buy a house. So, all we could do was:
*Provide print outs of job applications hubby has applied to in the UK
*My parents mortgage statement
*A print out of how much our car is worth, plus a photocopy of the title to prove we owned it to sell (a potential $7000)
*And a letter written by me. I explained we were moving back in with my parents (to help put us in a financial position to save very quickly to buy a house). I explained neither of us have any plans WHATSOEVER of claiming benefits. I provided my parents contact details and explained I am from a very loving and supportive family who would NEVER see us in financial strife. They didnt actually contact my parents to verify this anyway.
All I wanted to say is, if you dont meet all the criteria, DO NOT GIVE UP HOPE. Do not come onto forums and be disheartened, and DO NOT take other peoples advice as FACT. If you feel in your heart you have a genuine case, just explain. Theyre not stupid at the UKBA, they know genuine real cases. If you cant provide what they want, just do your best, explain your situation fully and you will be fine . I just hope I can put some peoples minds at ease. I know how difficult and stressful this situation is. The last thing I wanted was to be seperated from my husband while were expecting our first child (a lil baby girl) :p
Emma
** We applied to the consualte in New York and the whole process took exactly 3 weeks. We forgot to provide a copy of hubbys divorce from years ago, so we feel this slowed the process down by a few days. Overall, it was a quick, efficient (highly expensive) process
It was rude. People spend a lot of time trying to guide others on forums like these to prevent a failed application. She's just saying "ah f*ck what they say, it's easy". If it were me applying, I'd rather look at the horror stories and have a tightly sealed application rather than read a nice success story and ignore all the other more realistic refusals and approvals based on solid evidence.BigEasy wrote:Congratulations on your success and good luck with the new arrival.
I didn't think your posting was "rude" in any way whatsoever - it's good to hear some positive news and your application may be directly relevant for others reading this forum in a similar situation to yours, coming from a "fast track" country, or wherever.
Either way, thanks for sharing.
At worst, if the situation doesn't apply to you, the original post is not helpful, but it's certainly not "rude". That seems a vastly over the top, and rather unfair, accusation.ElenaW wrote:It was rude. People spend a lot of time trying to guide others on forums like these to prevent a failed application. She's just saying "ah f*ck what they say, it's easy". If it were me applying, I'd rather look at the horror stories and have a tightly sealed application rather than read a nice success story and ignore all the other more realistic refusals and approvals based on solid evidence.BigEasy wrote:Congratulations on your success and good luck with the new arrival.
I didn't think your posting was "rude" in any way whatsoever - it's good to hear some positive news and your application may be directly relevant for others reading this forum in a similar situation to yours, coming from a "fast track" country, or wherever.
Either way, thanks for sharing.
And yeah there's a huge difference between fast track applications and those that come from Africa, Asia, etc... Oh and just because an application is sent to New York does not mean they treat all applications equally. They are way more lenient towards American applicants.
Exactly right.SoHopeful wrote:Congrats on your success.
However, although I see that some applicants have a fairly straightforward process with the UKBA, this is often depending on the country. I have been married since 2010 and because my husband is from Jamaica which is notorious for refusals in the past, I am waiting until my situation is watertight before applying. If I had submitted an application with similar to your there, it would have most likely been refused.