Welcome to the forum
Our original plan was to begin the move in winter 2022. Applying for a 2 Year Long-Term Standard Visitor Visa, having Caroline return to the US every 6 months until the visa expires, before the end of which we were aiming to have married legally in the US (2024), allowing us to apply for the Spouse Visa before returning to the UK to settle permanently.
However upon looking into this further, we have several doubts about the feasibility of this timeline and the visas we aim to use.
I’m afraid this kind of visitor visa won’t be an option for you. The 2-year visitor visa is only for people in certain specific situations where they have a long history (many years) of regular necessary travel to the UK as a visitor and require a longer-term visa so that they don’t have to keep applying for new 6-month visitor visas.
For example, they need to enter the UK regularly (I.e. every few weeks) on business, or if they have immediate family members living in the UK that they have to visit several times a year (I.e, young children or sick family members).
Visitors to the UK cannot use the visitor visa to ‘live’ in the UK with a partner… if UKVI suspect they are doing this, they will be refused the visa or refused entry to the UK.
So you won’t be able get a 2-year visitor visa to spend 6 months at a time living together, because that would break the rules of the visa.
> Can we build the required evidence for a Spousal Visa if Caroline cannot work in the UK? Can we apply for joint bank accounts and provide evidence of her living in the UK if she is only there as a visitor?
As a visitor, she cannot legally live in the UK, plus she cannot work, be put on bills or tenancy agreements, or open a joint bank account.
However, you can still meet the requirements for the spousal visa without needing any of that anyway, so you don’t need to worry about that stuff.
You won’t need to provide evidence of her living in the UK until AFTER she has the spousal visa and is living in the UK.
For a spousal visa, for the relationship evidence you simply provide the following:
- marriage certificate… your cheapest and easiest option is to marry in the US as a visitor, then apply directly for the spousal visa
- 1 or 2 photos of you together
- boarding passes/tickets from trips to see each other
- letters/cards sent to each other
- evidence of regular communication while living apart, such as screenshots of call logs, emails, messages etc.
The evidence of living together comes later, when you are renewing her spousal visa after 2.5 years.
> We are saving as much as possible, but even so, having her be out of work for up to 24 months and having to fly back to the states every 6 months will be a huge drain on finances/savings.
Do you have a job in the UK? If so, and you earn more than £18,600 per year, you can meet the financial requirement for the spousal visa yourself, without her needing to come here as a visitor at all.
Her income cannot be considered for the initial spousal visa anyway because she does not have the right to work in the UK.
> We cannot find any information on how long Caroline will need to exit the UK for before re-entering on her Visitor Visa after every 6 months is up. For example, can she just visit another EU country and come back? How does exit/re-entry on a Long-Term Standard Visitor Visa work?
She won’t be able to qualify for a long term visitor visa anyway, but for info:
There’s no rule, but generally speaking she should spend as much time outside the U.K. as she did in the U.K… so if she has been in the UK for 6 months, she should wait at least 6 months before returning
She also needs to show she has not been spending more time in the UK than in the US, that she is not using a visitor visa to live with you in the UK, and she will need to show that she has a life to return to in the US, by way of a current job and a home she is maintaining, plus any other commitments she has back in the US.
> Would marriage in the US affect our Spouse Visa application in the UK in any way?
>Would it be wiser to be legally married (i.e. go to courthouse and sign documents) in the US first and apply for the Spouse Visa afterwards, as opposed to attempting to jump through all of the hoops of our above plan which involves Caroline visiting the UK for extended periods of time?
Yes.
It’s much, much easier to marry in the US and apply for the spousal visa than it is to marry in the UK. You can just fly there as a visitor and marry in a weekend… while marrying in the UK requires a specific visa and at least 28-35 days of residency.
The majority of people on this forum have married in the US and applied for the spousal visa because it cuts out an extra visa application, saves over £1000 in visa fees and saves several months of time.
> Would just "signing the papers" (i.e. without the ceremony) to get married legally in the US count as sufficient enough evidence for a Spouse Visa application in the UK?
All you need for the spousal visa is a legal marriage certificate.
The ceremony type is irrelevant. If it’s legal in the US, it’s legal in the UK… and that’s all that matters.
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