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Do you appreciate that according to the British Embassy Tokyo website the 2006 programme has closed. the 2007 programme will be announced early in the new year. Click here for details.our plan at the moment is for her to come over on the Youth Exchange Visa
If the visa exceeds six months in length, and it appears that the visa would be 12 months in length, then yes, a Certificate of Approval to Marry could be applied for, as long as at least 3 months left on the visa when the application is made.Can anyone tell me whether it will cause us problems when we get married if she comes over on a youth exchange visa/permit/whatever the thing is called?
There certainly is! It is of 6 months duration, and is issued so that the person can get married in the UK within those 6 months.Should she come over on a fiance visa? Is there such a thing?
That application can be made in the UK. You can apply in person at a PEO ... application cost = £500 ... as long as all the required evidence taken with you it is a same-day, while-you-wait, process. Or alternatively the application can be made by post .... cost £335 ... and it might take say 4 weeks.once we're married and we apply for the spouse visa, how long does it take for the thing to arrive? Do we get interviewed? Does she have to leave the country and then come back in again or soemthing stupid like that?
NHS treatment? From as soon as she arrives on her fiancée visa. NINO? From when she has her spouse visa. British Citizenship? After she has been in the UK for 3 years she will be entitled to apply for Naturalisation as British, and as soon as she has her Certificate of Naturalisation, applying for a British Passport is an easy matter.Does she then get all the rights of a British citizen? British passport? NI number? Right to vote? NHS treatment?
I think that is right. Personally I haven't got a clue. She is more likely to be able to answer that.Does her getting married in anyway affect her status in Japan? When we spoke about this she said that when you get married in Japan your name is taken off some kind of register of familes or somthing and put onto her husband's... you know what, maybe I should aks her to clarify that before asking you guys.
And to add to what John says, after two years on a spouse visa she qualifies for Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR), which is the main form of permanent resident status in the UK.John wrote:NHS treatment? From as soon as she arrives on her fiancée visa. NINO? From when she has her spouse visa. British Citizenship? After she has been in the UK for 3 years she will be entitled to apply for Naturalisation as British, and as soon as she has her Certificate of Naturalisation, applying for a British Passport is an easy matter.Does she then get all the rights of a British citizen? British passport? NI number? Right to vote? NHS treatment?
When You get married in Japan you leave your Parents Family register and start your own. This is similar to a birth certificate but it's for the whole family not just an individual. As a male they are the top of this family register but as you are not Japanese you will not be. Your wife will be top and you will just merely get a mention as her husband. This will not effect her status or rights in Japan, Even if she move to the UK.Does her getting married in anyway affect her status in Japan? When we spoke about this she said that when you get married in Japan your name is taken off some kind of register of familes or somthing and put onto her husband's... you know what, maybe I should aks her to clarify that before asking you guys.