How to Get a UK Visitor’s Visa.
Nota Bene: a normal UK visitor’s visa to the United Kingdom lasts 6 months and allows the recipient to enter and leave the country as often as he/she wishes. Normally, though, at least for the first visa, you will be restricted to the length of stay you specify in the interview. For example, if you say you want to go for two weeks, your six months visa will have a note pinned to it requiring you to leave after two weeks. You have to agree to this limitation in writing, although your UK visitor’s visa is clearly valid for six months!
The stipulations of the visa also forbid you from claiming social benefits such as social security and national health. Very often, applicants are refused on their first try, because they do not present a strong enough reason for wanting to go to the UK. If the reason is to visit a friend, then the onus is on the applicant to prove a continuing, long-lasting relationship. This should have continued for at least 6 months and you should devote your attention to proving it
Now we will look into proving this relationship. Prospective visitors from poorer countries will usually need a sponsor. This sponsor will have to provide overwhelming evidence of a ‘long-standing continuous relationship’. After all, they don’t want your visitor doing a disappearing act just before their UK visitor’s visa expires! As evidence, you can provide, for example: photos, restaurant menus, phone cars and bills, travel tickets, ATM receipts etc. You have to persuade the embassy staff, but they are receptive.
You could then obtain the application form (VAF) either by writing to or visiting the nearest British Embassy or Consulate or downloading it from the Internet. Most embassy sites provide excellent advice on what is required or recommended to put in the envelope with your UK visitor’s visa application form, but it will include: two colour, passport-size photos; the application fee (about 50) in local currency; the applicant’s passport; proof of the applicant’s address; proof of a continuing relationship of at least six months; the sponsor’s letter; proof of the sponsor’s means of support; proof of the sponsor’s accommodation and possibly, the sponsor’s passport to prove entry stamps.
Therefore, it is necessary to realize that the sponsor plays a critical role if you want to make your first application for a UK visitor’s visa a successful one. He/she must be prepared to cover your financial requirements during your stay in the United Kingdom and he/she must prove it with a letter and bank statements.
This means that the sponsor has to provide a letter from his/her employer proving continued, stable employment and/or a bank book, proving that he/she has enough money to provide what he/she has pledged on the UK visitor’s visa application form; and proof of accommodation in the form of paid council tax bills, property deeds or a letter from the mortgage provider. Proof of marital status does not seem to be an issue for the sponsor or the applicant, although the question is asked of the latter. Some applicants are refused for apparently strange reasons such as:
“the person applying for a UK visitor’s visa has never left the country before”: this is usually quite easy to remedy if you live near a border.
“the person applying for a UK visitor’s visa does not seem to have strong socio-economic ties to his/her country of origin” or, in other words, they don’t trust you to return to your country. A letter from your boss, doctor, solicitor or village elder; proof of children or living parents; proof of property are all useful.
Do not be tempted to hurry the application for a UK visitor’s visa. Ensure that you have a ‘valid reason’ for wanting to go to the UK and remember it; ensure that you can prove everything that you say. Pretend for the day of the interview for a UK visitor’s visa that you are a lawyer and provide solid, written proof.
Run through applicant’s story until he/she has it well-rehearsed (they will not want to see the sponsor and sometimes, he/she is not even allowed to wait on the embassy compound). The applicant for a UK visitor’s visa will be required to attend an interview the first time and this can be held in English or the applicant’s native tongue. The UK visitor’s visa will normally be available for collection the next day.
Tip: ask for a stay permit for longer than you require, because a UK visitor’s visa runs from the day you get it and you can’t book a flight until you have the visa, can you? Similarly coming back, you may be delayed. You will probably need to cancel the remainder of the 180 day multiple entry UK visitor’s visa to prevent you going back to the UK on that visa. If this required, don’t arrive back on a Friday, unless you want to wait until Monday for the embassy to open.
And lastly a warning: don’t be tempted to lie - its not worth it. You will be caught out!
http://www.romancetracker.com/how-to-get-a-uk-visitors-visa-2/
thanks for clear my vision regrading the visa process
i appreciate regarding this use full information....
can any one tell the duration of visit visa and i just wana ask i thing that visit visa can extended from there?????
if you mean a visa for a foriginer here in thailand can be extended, yes it can, maybe only once and maybe only 7/15 or 30 days but usually yes, in pattaya we have an imigration office at soi 5 jontiem beech, where they are very helpfull.
now the thread you are in is about
"Applying for a UK visitor’s visa for a foreign friend to go to the
United Kingdom"
if that is what you mean, i honestly dont know, but i know a company that are very helpfull and should give you any advice you need on that
http://www.davieskhan.co.uk/
cheers chris
It is worth pointing out here that a British (UK) visitor's visa is valid for six months and multiple entries into the UK, although in practice, the first visa to be granted will usually be limited by a note pinned into the visitor's passport. For example, if you have applied for a UK visitor's visa to visit friends for the month of, say, March, you would be granted a multiple entry, 180 day UK visitor's visa with a letter, signed by yourself, pinned into your passport, which states that you wish to visit the UK from March 1st to March 31st and that you will not attempt to extend that stay. The visa also precludes you from access to UK 'public funds' - social security, unemployment benefit, et etcetera.
You should not have problems. Tourist visa can be granted on arrival but make sure you have ticket to leave the UK at some point or a very good excuse for not having it.