Hello
Guest

Sponsored Links


Topic: Leaving on a jet plane. Eventually.  (Read 1013 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

  • *
  • Posts: 10

  • Liked: 1
  • Joined: Sep 2015
Leaving on a jet plane. Eventually.
« on: September 07, 2015, 06:56:39 PM »
Hey kids,

Quick introduction, I am American living outside Detroit, headed to Notts to join my husband, who is a UK citizen.  Hopefully getting a lawyer relative to help me through the visa process -- it doesn't look hard, just expensive, and fraught with "Ha ha, you missed a line, stay out you bloody foreigner!" pitfalls.

Just me, no pets, no dependents.  Got a couple rooms full of furniture that I have to sell, and a couple large items I want to take (an antique radio, and a console home organ being the largest), and trying to get it all together!  I'll be perusing the boards first before asking any super newbie questions like "how in the world do I get my stuff there".  But, thought I'd say hi first..

Hi!


  • *
  • Posts: 34

  • Liked: 1
  • Joined: Feb 2013
  • Location: Stockport, UK
Re: Leaving on a jet plane. Eventually.
« Reply #1 on: September 08, 2015, 11:56:11 AM »
Hi :) We have the same fears about the visa, how misunderstanding one question could negate the whole thing - but this forum is really helpful and all the solicitors we spoke to said how simple it was and how straightforward our case is so we're saving the extra and doing it ourselves (in probably more detail than they would!)

Good luck :)
Met online; April 2012
'More-than-friends'; 27th Dec 2012
Met first in UK; June 2013
Married in Memphis; 24th August 2015
Applied online; 27th November 2015
Biometrics Appt; 2nd December 2015
Package sent to Sheffield; 3rd December 2015
UPS delivered to Sheffield; 7th December 2015
Email from Sheffield confirming receipt; 8th December 2015
Decision Made; 14th December
VISA!!! 16th December


  • *
  • *
  • *
  • Posts: 26886

  • Liked: 3600
  • Joined: Jan 2007
Re: Leaving on a jet plane. Eventually.
« Reply #2 on: September 08, 2015, 12:25:47 PM »
Good luck with your move :).

As StubbornBrit says, you really shouldn't need a lawyer unless you have serious reasons to believe your application could be refused... such as serious criminal convictions or a bad UK immigration history (refused visas, illegal overstaying or working in the UK etc.).

It is a very straightforward application and is a tick-box visa, meaning if you meet the requirements and send the listed documents, they have to issue the visa.

As it is so expensive already, and there is plenty of good advice here on the forum, I would save the money you would spend on a lawyer (if they are charging you, that is) and put it towards your visa and your move to the UK instead.

There are a number of lawyers around who claim they know the process but actually have given visa applicants some very incorrect advice because they actually don't understand the visa requirements at all - if you use your lawyer relative, I would make sure they specialise in UK immigration law, are OISC registered, are very familiar with every single document and requirement for a spousal visa and have dealt with several cases this year (preferably in the last 3 months because some of the rules have changed recently). There are only 2 main immigration law firms we recommend here on the forum because we know they know their stuff and they are Laura Devine (based in NYC and London) and Medivisas (based in London).


  • *
  • *
  • Posts: 1041

  • Officially a UK Yank!! Established 2002
  • Liked: 38
  • Joined: May 2002
  • Location: East Sussex
Re: Leaving on a jet plane. Eventually.
« Reply #3 on: September 08, 2015, 07:54:40 PM »
Good luck I'm originally from Toledo and have lived in the UK for 13 years whereabouts in MI are u ?
My home for 18 years since June 2002. Became a citizen 2006


  • *
  • Posts: 10

  • Liked: 1
  • Joined: Sep 2015
Re: Leaving on a jet plane. Eventually.
« Reply #4 on: September 08, 2015, 10:13:11 PM »
Thank you for the information and support!  My lawyer relative is an American immigration lawyer, and was going to take a look and see if I could do it myself (consensus here is apparently 'yes') and if not, she was going to call in a favor with a UK immigration lawyer she knows.  But, I don't know anything about her friend, where he/she works, etc.  And I would rather not be tied to the pro bono timetable I have been subject to.

As far as I know I shouldn't have any disqualifying conditions, since I speak English, my husband is employed and makes a smidge over the £18,600 required (gross), and I haven't tried to immigrate before nor do I have any convictions in the US.

Blondshania, currently I'm living just outside Hell, though I spent most of my years here in St Clair Shores, a couple in Ann Arbor, and was actually raised in the state of Wyoming.  When I visited, the Midlands seemed to have a bit of rust belt flair.  Seemed like a more temperate, less sprawled microcosm of Michigan in fact.


Sponsored Links