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How Many Days/weeks/months Before I Can Request Again For A Japan Tourist Visa

How long can I reapply for a Japan tourist visa after the 3 month stay expires?

You should check with the Japanese consulate, but your visa is probably multiple entry, so it wouldn’t need to be renewed.I once did the following:Received a 3-month tourist visa.Renewed while still in Japan for 3 more months.Took a one-week vacation to Guam.Returned to Japan with the same visa for 3 more months.Renewed again while in Japan.This is the recommended maximum! If you try to push it, you could be denied entry. Better to wait a year before coming again.

After my 6-month UK tourist visa finishes, can I leave for a day anywhere and come back or is there a certain number of days that I have to spend outside?

Some of the answers given so far are dangerously wrong; in particular, since the question asks specifically about UK visas, any answer making reference to ICE should be disregarded, since this relates to Immigration control in the USA, where immigration legislation is different to that which prevails in the UK.If you have either been issued a UK visa before travelling to the UK or have been given leave to enter at a UK port of entry, it is because you have convinced either a visa officer or a border force officer that ýou intend to remain for the period you have stated you intend to stay. This may have been one or two weeks, or a month, or any period up to a maximum of 6 months. If you stay for the full six months and then return within a short period, the border force officer will take the view either that you obtained your visa by misrepresentation (if you intended to do this from the outset) or that there has been a change of circumstances since your original or leave to enter was granted, and will cancel your visa and/or refuse you entry; if, moreover, he believes you have used misrepresenteation or deception, you will be banned from returning to the UK for up to 10 years.As a former immigration officer, I would take some convincing that anyone who had stayed signicantly longer than they first declared and then returns within at least a year was a genuine visitor.

Can I apply for jobs while on a tourist visa in Japan?

I got my first job in Japan while on a tourist visa.In fact, the company that hired me took care of the entire visa process, I never stepped foot inside an immigration office till years later.

How long does it take to get an Australian tourist visa after applying?

Hi,Australia is the sixth biggest country by the land area and home of the many beautiful locations. The picturesque mountains, clear beaches, swanky restaurants, and diverse cultural surroundings makes Australia a perfect destination to travel.As far as processing time is concerned for the Australia Tourist visa, it depends upon number of factors.These factors are:· You must provide all the necessary supporting documents when you lodge an application· How well and how fast you respond to requests for an additional information· How long it takes to complete any required checks on information you have provided to support your documentationApply for Australia Tourist Visa.There are two processing time displayed for the 75 percent and 95 percent of the application submitted globally. Usually, after submitting all the relevant documents it takes around 1 month to get your Australia tourist visa processed.Processing time apply from the date your complete application is received by the DIBP processing office.Important Notice: a decision to grant or refuse your visa application is strongly based on the information and documentation you provide at the time of lodgment.Therefore, make sure that you submit all the relevant documents properly because a single mistake can omit your chance to visit Australia. Hereby, I suggest you to please consult a registered visa consultancy like ‘Aptech Global’ for your Australia tourist documentation process.To get a complete assistance in this regard, you can contact the visa specialists for your Australia tourist application and documentation process. You can fill the free assessment form or contact on the toll free number 18001201602 for the same.

How long can I stay in the Philippines with a tourist visa extension?

Three years, according to their own Philippines Immigration Bureau web site.However, (a) you need to extend your visa many times, first at 30 days, then 29 days (and get an ID Card), and then every 1, 2 or 6 months. I’m told (no personal experience) that after about 8 months they start getting curious as to why you are staying so long on a tourist visa, but they will extend it up to the full three years. And (b), each of those extensions is about PHP3,000, plus about PHP 5,000 for the ID Card (at the 2nd extension, and the ID Card is mandatory), and you have to re-register the card every year (January to March). (c) lastly, after you have been there 6 months straight, you are then required to seek permission (at about PHP1,000 or PHP2,000 - forget which) to leave - i.e. an Exit Permit.So, my suggestion is: stay about 5 months (into your third extension) and then hop on a cheap flight to a neighbouring country for a day or two ‘holiday’ from your holiday. Hong Kong, Taipei, Singapore, Bali, Jakarta or Hanoi / HCM are all good, cheap, choices (US$2–300 rtn airfare if booked well in advance) that are only a couple hours flying time away. That resets everything and you start over with 30 days as the first time (but you don’t have to get a new ID Card).Unlike most of the world, the Philippines actually wants people to stay (so you spend your money, of course, they are not altruistic, just smart). And given the extension fees, and the large numbers of tourists always there extending when I am, the extensions are funding the entire Immigration department budget I’m sure.Good luck, and enjoy your stay.

Departing US on the 181st day on a tourist visa - pls advice!?

My parents will be visiting us in the US in the next couple of weeks. Their return ticket is such that they will be departing the US on the 181st day. So they are exceeding the 180 day rule by a few hours. Is this a problem? Should they reschedule to an earlier departure? Would they not gain entry in the US or is this something we could fix later? Thanks in advance!

Getting a Visa for South Korea for at least 6 months stay?

I'd recommend you just come on a 90-day tourist visa, then go to Tsushima (a few-hour trip to Japan) and come back, and get 90 more days. It costs less than $100 to do this and you get to see Japan for a few hours.

Korea does not have a six-month tourist visa except for a few very lucky nationalities like the Canadians. However, just make a quick run to Japan and back on a boat (I've done this many times with no incident) and you'll be fine. If you were from the Philippines or China, they'd be suspicious, but most Europeans should be just fine -- no questions asked.

You can't work legally unless you have some kind of working visa, but if you work illegally, you probably won't get caught unless you keep doing it for years and years. Hopefully at that point, you'll be married and have an F-2 visa that lets you do whatever work you want. For continental Europeans, getting a regular, non-marriage working visa is extremely hard. It would be much easier if you had citizenship in an English-speaking country, but it sounds from your post like you don't.

Koreans almost always employ Koreans for various jobs. Whether you can speak Korean well or not is irrelevant -- the immigration bureau almost never issues working visas to foreigners except for cheap labor and to teach languages. Therefore, if you really want to work in Korea legally, you'll either need to get married, do a Working Holiday (reciprocal agreement between Korea and your home country), get a student visa with an S-3 work permit (not recommended, but you could make a living wage if you worked at a hagwon with the S-3 exemption), invest a significant sum in the country and start a business, or that kind of thing.

Some people are willing to grit their teeth and make a visa run to Japan every 90 days, or put up with a few unnecessary classes to get the S-3 work permit on the D-4 or D-2 student visa. Some people are willing to grit their teeth and invest a substantial sum in the country and open up a small business, like a Chinese restaurant. Unfortunately, there are few easy ways to come to Korea and work, especially for Europeans. I guess it all depends on how much you love this girl, and how hard you're willing to work for her!

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