ksand24 - thanks for clarifying the visa situation for me !! I was a bit confused because when searching through organizations, some say they have projects for a couple months, others longer, so I just assumed once I was set up with the organization I'd apply for the visa and so on. But good to know. Thanks for that link too--SO helpful!
Sorry, I think I've confused you even further.
You DO get set up with the organisation first and then apply for the visa, because in order to apply for the visa, the organisation has to issue you with a Tier 5 Certificate of Sponsorship.
What I was saying was that the MAXIMUM length of time any Tier 5 Charity Worker visa can be valid for is 12 months... so you would not be able to use it to stay longer than this.
However, that doesn't mean that every organisation will allow you to stay for 12 months... if an organisation is only offering a 2-month job, then your visa may only be valid for 2 months.
Thanks cloudsup for the advice--I knew it'd be a difficult process to apply but I didn't realize it'd take over a year! Good luck with yours!!
It's not that the process itself takes over a year, it that people generally apply a year in advance - and so you may not get a place on a course if you leave it too late.
Once you have a fiancé visa and you've gotten married, what happens next? Do you have to then apply for a spouse visa?
- The fiance visa is only valid for 6 months and does not allow any kind of work at all - not even unpaid volunteering. It currently costs £885.
- Once you are married, you will need to switch to an FLR(M) visa to extend the time you can stay in the UK. The FLR(M) visa is valid for 30 months (2.5 years) and does allow work. It costs £601 if you apply by post (currently a couple of months processing time), or £1,001 if you apply in person for a same-day decision.
- After those 2.5 years on FLR(M), you apply for another FLR(M) valid for 2.5 years (again £601 or £1,001, but it will probably keep increasing each year).
- After 5 years on FLR(M) you can apply for ILR (permanent residence), which currently costs £1,093 by post (currently 5 months processing) or £1,493 in person.
- Then, when you have ILR, you can apply for UK citizenship.
Alternatively, if you wish to marry in the US, you can apply directly for a spousal visa (valid 33 months, allows work, cost £885) and skip the fiance visa altogether - so it would save you the cost of one of the FLR(M) visas.
See here for a helpful flowchart showing the fiance/spousal visa process:
http://smilinginaforeignland.com/living-in-the-uk/uk-visas/Essentially:
Marry in the UK- Fiance visa (6 months, £885, no work)
- FLR(M) visa (30 months, £601 or £1,001)
- FLR(M) visa (30 months, £601 or £1,001)
- ILR (indefinite, £1,093 or £1,493)
Total visa cost at current prices: £3,180 - £4,380
OR
Marry in the US- Spousal visa (33 months, £885, work allowed)
- FLR(M) visa (30 months, £601 or £1,001)
- ILR (indefinite, £1,093 or £1,493)
Total visa cost at current prices: £2,579 - £3,379