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floomy

Hero Member
Dec 17, 2012
801
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Category........
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
Mine is kind of thin and what I saw and read in this forum it seems most ppl sending thick package.

so i am kind of worried.

My situation is simple.

my husband and i have neve been apart- so no long distance realtionship evidence needed.
we lived together in canada for years before we got married, but could not find any evidence now.
we do not have wedding or any ceremony but reception without photo (has separate sheet explained why we do not have any photo in our reception)
we have married for a year and have a daughter

so my supporting document is
plane tickets for our trips. lamaze class certificate.
photos- appx. 40 photos including I am holding my daughter in delivery room and couple of photos with my in-laws in canada

would that be enough?
 
"thick" does not always mean better.

No wedding photos is the only thing you are missing that would concern me but if you have a good explanation, then that should be fine

Your other information sounds good. 40 photos is more than enough. plane tickets are always good.
 
Wow....this totally isn't what I thought the topic was gonna be about....
 
Unfortunately, no one can tell what constitutes `enough' evidence, but the fact that you are married, certainly helps.

Do you currently have (or can you obtain, easily):

Joint bank account(s)?
If not, it might be easy to add the applicant to an account that the sponsor already has (changing an individual bank account to joint).
I did this with Scotia and it was pretty painless.

Joint cell phone account?
(again, I was added to my sponsor's plan so my name appears on the bill as well as hers...easy to do)

Joint lease, mortgage, etc.?

Costco membership card in both names?

Basically, anything outside of what a long distance couple would have, in place of things like phone logs, chat logs, email, etc.

Good luck!
 
DuberBlue said:
Wow....this totally isn't what I thought the topic was gonna be about....

;D
 
I have a REALLY NICE package waiting for me in Calgary ;)
 
This title did sure catch my attention lol ... Its not the size of the package what counts , its the contents that you have provided . :D
 
I think it needs to be thick enough to impress the visa officer :D
P.S. thickness is not the only thing they look at, quality in there needs to be good as well.
 
*insert bad joke*

ahem..


Well mine was about 2 inches thick..we had to get the HUGE envelope..because it was JUST a bit big for the step down in size envelope.
We are not married though. We've been living together 3 years, we submit 80-100 pictures of us in Vegas, with friends, out and about in the city, goofy selfies etc... My girl actually labelled the back of each picture with the date and place each one was taken. We submit apartment rental agreement and renters insurance docs, bank printouts showing both of our names on accounts, letters from our bank account manager, 3 letters from family members stating about what they know about our relationship, plane tickets, hotel reservation tickets.

I would say we submit a LOT of stuff....but since we're not married i figure that we HAD to. I wouldn't be to worried if i were you. 40 pictures and a marriage certificate is probably enough unless there are some BIG red flags that jump out at the person who is reviewing your application.

just my opinion.
 
Ours was also somewhat "thin". Thank goodness we sent it in before finding this forum or we would have been worried too. Before delving into a "list" of what you have or don't have included, perhaps more importantly, are you 'visa-exempt' and subsequently, which VO?
 
My wife and I sent in an application that I wouldn't consider thick. We didn't have a wedding ceremony or reception. We just went to city hall and handed in our wedding license. Of course, we explained out situation in an essay we wrote and included it in our application. We did send a lot of photos that were arranged in chronological order. I wrote the date, where the photo was taken and the names of the people in the photos. When we applied last year, we had been married for just over three years and had been together for just over five. I should mention that my wife is Japanese, so she is visa exempt.
 
The size doesn't matter much but important to submit enough evidence that addresses possible questions an officer may have and ensure you explain any anormalies. Our application is large(mostly our communication) but our lawyer will trim it. She said you don't want to send such a large application that could make an officer not want to deal with it. So I guess less is more.

If possible, get a lawyer to review your file before submission.
 
SenoritaBella said:
The size doesn't matter much but important to submit enough evidence that addresses possible questions an officer may have and ensure you explain any anormalies. Our application is large(mostly our communication) but our lawyer will trim it. She said you don't want to send such a large application that could make an officer not want to deal with it. So I guess less is more.

If possible, get a lawyer to review your file before submission.

We are doing the same.

We were confident that we could figure out the forms without too much difficulty (boy was I wrong about that one) but are now finally nearing the finish line for our application. You'd like to believe that if they really need to see more evidence, they will either request more, or schedule an interview before stamping DENIED across the application....which I'm sure they do.

Right?!?!?!
 
Going by people's experiences the forum, the applicants and their sponsors(in some cases) were interviewed before they were refused. They were usually asked to bring certain documents to the interview.

The odd situations I've read so far are cases where the officer requests a document(e.g. police certificate) and perhaps the applicant did not receive the request, did not provide document and gets denied.

Ponga said:
We are doing the same.

We were confident that we could figure out the forms without too much difficulty (boy was I wrong about that one) but are now finally nearing the finish line for our application. You'd like to believe that if they really need to see more evidence, they will either request more, or schedule an interview before stamping DENIED across the application....which I'm sure they do.

Right?!?!?!
 
I am curious as of why it matters that one is visa-exempt and what VO means.. Would anyone please clarify?