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21st August 2008 #1
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one way or return airline ticket?
Good day! I am applying for a fiancée visa, i would like to ask, is it legal to fly into the UK with a single one way airline ticket? Or does UK has rules or guidelines about this? I hope someone can give me answer to this query. Thank you so much..
Best regards..
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21st August 2008 #2
I think it's okay to just have one-way ticket if you're on fiancee visa since you're getting married in UK and expected to settle there after the wedding. Fiancee visa is valid for 6 months so you have to make sure that the wedding happens within that period. Visit visa is the one that requires return ticket.
Mench
Jer. 29:11 "For I know the plans I have for you, plan to prosper you and not to harm you, plan to give you hope and a future"
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21st August 2008 #3
Actually, I'm not convinced that someone on a visit visa has to have a return ticket. I've read the guidelines provided to Immigration officers - the only thing I could find about return ticket was words to the effect: "Possession of a return ticket is not, of itself, sufficient proof that the visitor will leave on expiry of the visa."
Ruby did not have a return ticket when she came to the UK on a visit visa - however, I did have a lengthy discussion with the immigration officer before he let her in!
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29th August 2008 #4
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- Aug 2008
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- Spain since 1988. My wife has been here since June 2006
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Apologies that this not exactly equal, but when my wife came to Spain with me after we were married it was on a One Way as the visa was for 'family reunion' i.e. to settle in Spain with me.
There was a ‘funny’ situation thro. We first arrived in Europe at Frankfurt and, as I discovered later, that was where my wife should have ‘been admitted’ to Schengen Area. I was a bit stroppy with the official who started looking at my wife passport and told him we were in transit to Spain. He let us pass.
When we arrived in Malaga we just walked through, no immigration control, so I told a police officer that my wife had just arrived from Phil. He said we were just to go to our nearby police station the next day.
When we went there, they asked where the arrival stamp was. So back to Malaga, they said the stamp should have been done in Frankfurt and implied we should return there for it. I am a former UK police officer and for 15 years have been a voluntary translator at a police station in Spain, so I chatted around the problem and finally we got the stamp.
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29th August 2008 #5
That's an usual problem with Schengen. Your POE is the first airport in the schengen space. That's where immigration and customs are done. After you're inside Schengen and so even going to another country it's a domestic flight (meaning no immigration nor customs).
I know several people that had problems to prove the entry in the final country to start the residency card process.
For my Wife, as I was aware of the issue we kept all the boarding pass till Toulouse and with them and the passport stamped in Amsterdam we were able to prove the date of entry in France.
For all entering Schengen space in another country that the future residency country, it's important to find a way to prove the entry date in the country. John use the Spanish one, me the French one. It all depend on the country. Best is always ask police or immigration at the airport of the residency country when you arrive there.Best regards.
Yves
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29th August 2008 #6
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