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goelc wrote: ↑Thu May 23, 2024 7:19 pmHello moderators,
I have a query regarding Standard Visitor Visa for my parents and sister. I've provided detailed information about my background and my family’s background below. Some of this information may seem irrelevant, but I want to ensure I don't overlook anything. Apologies for the lengthy post.
My Details:
- I have been in the UK for over five years on a skilled worker visa and was granted ILR earlier this year.
- I am on a fixed-term contract that runs out in mid-August 2024, and I am currently working on extending my work contract.
- Marital status: single (in case this is relevant).
My Family:
- My family comprises of my parents and a younger sister. Both of my parents are retired and live in their own house in our home country. Their siblings also live in the same country.
- Both parents receive pensions, although my mum’s pension is quite small due to her private sector job, so she is dependant on my dad. The house is in my dad’s name.
- They have additional income from interest accrued from their savings, including savings accounts and fixed deposits.
- I think this seems enough to show their social and economic ties to the home country.
- My sister (single) lives with my parents and is employed. Although her job isn't highly paid, it is sufficient for her living expenses. She also has some savings, and fixed deposits in her name.
- My parents have one visa rejection, and my sister has two visa rejections by the Belgian embassy from about 6-7 years ago. The rejections were due to a mistake on our part where we applied for a ‘family visa’ instead of a ‘tourist visa.’ The Embassy rejected the visas on financial grounds which seemed relevant for the applied visa category. My parents don’t have any travel history, but my sister has since travelled to the UAE once.
Query:
I would like to invite my parents and sister to visit me in the UK on a visitor visa. I understand that previous rejections don't necessarily entail further rejections, and each country has its own policies and procedures. I'm being extra cautious to mitigate any grounds for refusal.
1. Would it be advisable to submit visa applications for my whole family together? I’ve been recommended by travel agencies that there’s a higher chance of rejection if applying for the entire family at once. I agree it's better to split them up
2. If not, would it be better to apply for my parents' visas first and then apply for my sister’s visa once theirs have been granted? That would be my suggestion
3. A close family friend, who has been a British citizen for over 10 years, is willing to invite and show sponsorship for my family for the trip. Is this advisable, given that I am not inviting them myself? You have ILR, you have same residency rights as a Brit, you can invite them yourself. Better ties as well
4. If my family supports their own expenses, approximately how much funds per person are deemed sufficient for a one-month UK trip? Why would you want to put a 1 month trip? 10-14 days max. Apart from flights, £200 should suffice.
5. Does the required amount change if I am/third-party is financing their trip? They still need to have ample savings in their accounts. To show that they're self sustaining back home. But you can fully sponsor them if you have the finances for that. 6 months payslips and account would be required
I hope this clarifies my situation. I would highly appreciate any suggestions, advice, or comments. If the Belgian visa (Schengen) rejection isn't on their passports, you don't have to mention it
Thank you for your help.
goelc wrote: ↑Sun May 26, 2024 1:25 pmThank you for your suggestions. I have a few follow up questions as below:
1. Separate application of my parents and my sister (point 2 in the post): Could this be considered as fishy? Case worker may wonder why we didn't apply for visa together.
One reasoning I can give is that there's a change in travel plan and my sister will now be joining my folks. So, we explicitly show my parents visa and say that they will travel as soon as my sister gets the visa. Do you think that could work? Any other suggestions.
2. For my sister's personal ties to the home country - She is not married but her boyfriend lives in the same city. Is there a way to show the same to give case worker the confidence that she is a genuine visitor and will be returning back from the UK?
3. About Belgian visa rejection - do you mean rejection stamp in the passport?
There is no stamp at all in the passports, we only had received the letter from the Embassy. I am wondering if we don't show this rejection, what if it comes up in their system as countries usually share immigration data across borders, chances of which are probably very small?
Thank you!
goelc wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 5:07 pmHi Ticktack. Thank you for your response.
Total spending in the UK: £1000 That's too much money. £100-£150 should be fine eacheach for my mum and dad. I was initially thinking to sponsor their trip and show my bank statements and pay slips for the purpose You can still sponsor them if you want, but they still need to show their finances. This was to cover the base for refusal for the previous Belgium visa in 2017.
I have been given advice to either show that my folks will be covering their expenses or splitting the costs between them and me (say like 60:40). What would you suggest? As above
Sorry for any confusion about the financial part. So, my mum has savings + fixed deposits of ca. £40k. Her regular income is ca £2400 (pension + regular interest from saving deposits). For her and my dad's financial position - I can attach bank statements, fixed deposit statements, balance certificates, and pension statements. Hope this will suffice. That would be fine. It's a lot of money they have stored/saved. Navigate the tricky questions of finances well and they should be fine.
Thank you for your inputs, appreciate it!Ticktack wrote: ↑Tue Jun 11, 2024 9:36 amgoelc wrote: ↑Mon Jun 10, 2024 5:07 pmHi Ticktack. Thank you for your response.
Total spending in the UK: £1000 That's too much money. £100-£150 should be fine each £1000 included flight tickets as well which is the major expense.each for my mum and dad. I was initially thinking to sponsor their trip and show my bank statements and pay slips for the purpose You can still sponsor them if you want, but they still need to show their financesYes, I am definitely showing their finances to demonstrate their financial ties to the home country.. This was to cover the base for refusal for the previous Belgium visa in 2017.
I have been given advice to either show that my folks will be covering their expenses or splitting the costs between them and me (say like 60:40). What would you suggest? As above
Sorry for any confusion about the financial part. So, my mum has savings + fixed deposits of ca. £40k. Her regular income is ca £2400 (pension + regular interest from saving deposits). For her and my dad's financial position - I can attach bank statements, fixed deposit statements, balance certificates, and pension statements. Hope this will suffice. That would be fine. It's a lot of money they have stored/saved. Navigate the tricky questions of finances well and they should be fine.