- Sep 29, 2009
- 105
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Hong Kong
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- November 2009
- Med's Done....
- October 2009 and 15 April 2011
- Interview........
- 4 April 2011
- Passport Req..
- 4 April 2011
- VISA ISSUED...
- 7 July 2011
- LANDED..........
- 15 July 2011
These are questions for ImmOfficer.
You’re right – this is the best Immigration forum.
I am a Canadian citizen living with my Chinese wife in Zhuhai, China.
Each year we’d like to spend about half our time in Canada (where my family lives), and half the time in Canada (where her family lives).
We have been putting together an application for permanent residency for her. But as we read about the difficulties of getting approval, and the time delays for processing, I begin to wonder whether it might be wiser to apply each year for a tourist visa for my wife.
I left Canada for Costa Rica in 2003, and would be re-establishing residence in Canada if we went for a permanent residency visa, or residence in China if we opted for tourist visas.
So, the questions:
#1 Would she get a tourist visa more easily if we bought a house here in China, and she had her name on the house deed? Currently we are renting.
#2 Will the fact that she was denied a student visa in 2008 complicate her applications for a tourist visa? She was denied the student visa for lack of sufficient evidence she would return to China at the end of her studies. At that time we were not married; we are now. Evidence of our life in China would be a rental lease, bank accounts here, but not much else. (This underlines the importance of question #1)
#3 Is there a multi-year tourist visa, as there is in the USA, and if so how to get one (eventually)?
#4 The TRV application form mentions a return plane ticket as one proof of intent to return to China. But this is an expensive (or at least inconvenient) shot in the dark. First, we must buy a refundable ticket (more expensive than a non-refundable one), because many things could go wrong. The visa could be denied, or given for 2 months while we bought a 3-month ticket.
So, how important is an actual ticket? Could we attach instead a confirmation of the ticket, without actually going one step further and buying it?
Finally, a general question. How on earth do people who stay in Canada illegally manage? Surely they need documents, need money, need a bank account, need to rent a car, etc etc. – all of this requiring documentation not available to an illegal. It is a world that must be horrible. Comments?
You’re right – this is the best Immigration forum.
I am a Canadian citizen living with my Chinese wife in Zhuhai, China.
Each year we’d like to spend about half our time in Canada (where my family lives), and half the time in Canada (where her family lives).
We have been putting together an application for permanent residency for her. But as we read about the difficulties of getting approval, and the time delays for processing, I begin to wonder whether it might be wiser to apply each year for a tourist visa for my wife.
I left Canada for Costa Rica in 2003, and would be re-establishing residence in Canada if we went for a permanent residency visa, or residence in China if we opted for tourist visas.
So, the questions:
#1 Would she get a tourist visa more easily if we bought a house here in China, and she had her name on the house deed? Currently we are renting.
#2 Will the fact that she was denied a student visa in 2008 complicate her applications for a tourist visa? She was denied the student visa for lack of sufficient evidence she would return to China at the end of her studies. At that time we were not married; we are now. Evidence of our life in China would be a rental lease, bank accounts here, but not much else. (This underlines the importance of question #1)
#3 Is there a multi-year tourist visa, as there is in the USA, and if so how to get one (eventually)?
#4 The TRV application form mentions a return plane ticket as one proof of intent to return to China. But this is an expensive (or at least inconvenient) shot in the dark. First, we must buy a refundable ticket (more expensive than a non-refundable one), because many things could go wrong. The visa could be denied, or given for 2 months while we bought a 3-month ticket.
So, how important is an actual ticket? Could we attach instead a confirmation of the ticket, without actually going one step further and buying it?
Finally, a general question. How on earth do people who stay in Canada illegally manage? Surely they need documents, need money, need a bank account, need to rent a car, etc etc. – all of this requiring documentation not available to an illegal. It is a world that must be horrible. Comments?