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The marriage visitor visa is for couples who want to marry abroad, for example like many British couples who want to marry on a beach in Spain etc except for foreign couples not from the UK who want to marry in the UK but have no intentions of staying in the UK or settling in the UK.THO wrote: ↑Fri Jun 15, 2018 11:58 amBut I am settled in the UK and after we get (if she get the visa) she will return home and apply for a visa from there. The reason we went for this Visit visa, and not the fiancé one, is twofold, one it is far cheaper, and two it is much quicker to get and my father does not have long, as he has cancer. So we stated this.
So, are you saying because I am settled here and she is not, we will be rejected automatically?
The process is very stressful and costly! im not a solicitor or adviser but i dont think they have given you correct information.THO wrote: ↑Fri Jun 15, 2018 12:51 pmAlso, I should mention I spoke to a visa solicitor, and asked his advice. He said that the main difference between the marriage visit and fiancé is that for the second one you don't have to prove you will go home, but the first one they need to believe you will. But how does anyone prove they will go home? It's more of a reason to stay if you have financial burdens / obligations at home such as a mortgage or child?
And, what is the point of a visa if no one can get it? Marriage visit seems a very odd visa, where someone who is not settled in the UK can have his fiancé come over to marry, and he/ she has to go back. Why doesn't he/she just go back to their place and marry there?
That says it all really, and as cruel as the home office are, they will use it against you both.
I believe the issue here is that the OP wants his terminally ill father to be present at the wedding and he is not well enough to travel.Katie_France wrote: ↑Fri Jun 15, 2018 6:30 pmTo add only to what Casa has already said. If you are refused for marriage visitor visa, it will be cheaper if you marry anywhere (Germany or anywhere else), and apply for spouse settlement visa.
#Casa wrote: ↑Fri Jun 15, 2018 6:20 pmI fail to see that there's a problem applying for a marriage visitor visa if your wife intends to leave the UK after you are married.
Can you clarify that my understanding is correct:
Due to personal circumstances you wish to marry in the UK and later apply for a Spouse Settlement visa.
There is no restriction on the time you are required to wait before submitting the Spouse visa application after she returns to her home country. She simply needs to meet the requirements to qualify for settlement.
You won't be using a Marriage Visitor visa to circumvent the Immigration Rules. This would only be the case if your wife had no intention to leave the UK after the wedding has taken place.
It appears from your post that you are applying for the correct visa for the route you intend to take.
Employment in home country, letter from employer granting time off work, family ties, social ties, financial ties, property ownership, savings etc etcDoes anyone have any idea what the visa officials would accept as proof that someone intends to return home? It doesn't seem possible to me, that anyone can prove this.
This actual could cause an ECO to think the opposite and believe she will remain in the UK and trying to circumvent the immigration rules by avoiding the more difficult and costly fiance visa. Many people have done this using visitor visas as they are cheaper, which is why UKVI are skepticalAnd do you agree that proving our relationship is real, and therefore the intent to marry, should be enough for the official to assume that she won't be absconding?
THO wrote: ↑Tue Jul 03, 2018 11:58 amHi,
We are still waiting to hear about the visa, I expect it will be a declined but we live in hope. However, I decided to do some research to see if there was anyway I could challenge an unfair decision, since the MVV decision is supposed to be un-challengeable. I thought though, that my human right is to marry and live with who I choose, and denying my fiancé a visa, is a breach of that.
So I dug up something called a Pre-action Protocol. I would need a good immigration solicitor, and I think I have found one, and it would cost between £600 to £1,000, but this is a way of quickly getting the H/O to justify their reason for refusal, and if they can't do that with a clear and relevant reason, then it's grounds for a court case. Apparently, once they see they can't defend themselves in court they overturn the decision and grant a visa.
Apparently this can be done in very quick order too, sometimes in days but mostly in around 3 weeks. My case could be quick due to the reason we need a visa fast.
Anyone any further details on this option?