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Thank you very much for responding. You are right I am not keen on marriage for the moment as I am finishing up a long divorce procedure and very simply because I think we need to spend more time together before committing that much further. I am just afraid that in her application for a student visa it may look quite obvious that she is joining a boyfriend even if she will follow through with a full course of study: I think there is nothing bad in being upfront about it if she gets asked the question but the immigration officer may think differently: any thoughts on that?dalebutt wrote:Well student visa may be the solution if you are not planning to get married. If you do get married it will be almost a straight forward application in which she will end up being granted a 5 year residence card that will enable her to work, start business, etc etc.
If you aren't keen on marriage at the moment, the only possible solution would be for her to apply for a student visa, and whilst she is in Ireland , you have to be living together for 2 years with proofs of cohabitation to hand she may apply and be granted 5 years residence documentation based on Defacto.
Thank you. I am keeping all "evidence".IntegratedMigrant wrote:Keep in contact with her more frequently and keep the traces and records!. Flight details, holidays, photos, messages, etc.
You can apply for her to join you in a year, two or three based on Defacto Relationship.
See below for more details
http://www.inis.gov.ie/en/INIS/Pages/WP07000278
Yes, I think if no one asks about it there is no need to mention it; but if they do it is not a good idea to hide it from them.miamiheat wrote:I think there is nothing bad in being upfront about it if she gets asked the question but the immigration officer may think differently: any thoughts on that?
It is in fact a language school as first there is the language to be learned prior to anything else. Her verbal English is a bit rough but not that bad but she cant write: she wouldn't be able to attend any type of course.jeupsy wrote:Yes, I think if no one asks about it there is no need to mention it; but if they do it is not a good idea to hide it from them.miamiheat wrote:I think there is nothing bad in being upfront about it if she gets asked the question but the immigration officer may think differently: any thoughts on that?
I think if she has an offer from a college here, getting the visa shouldn't be an issue and they are not to likely to ask questions. Maybe if it is "just" a language school they would scrutinise her application a bit more.