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Visa Going To The Usa To Live With My Husband

If living in the USA while tramitting your J2 VISA. Can you travel throught the USA with your foreign passport?

there is no word tramitting, and transmitting doesn't make sense either.

A J2 visa holder is somebody who is married or a dependent child of a J1 visa holder. The J2 visa is only valid if the J1 visa holder has entered the country with his/her J1 visa.

Please review your information and repost question.

If your sister does not have a B2 visitors visa but came on a visa waiver your sister cannot change to a different visa while in the US anyway. If she is on a visa waiver I would strongly recommend that she leaves when expected. If she overstays a visa waiver she can't get one again.

While legally in the US your sister should have no problem flying.

Edit: she does not NEED an I515A form, she was GIVEN the the I515A form because some document was missing. Since I have no idea what document was missing and what is required I strongly suggest that she goes with her husband (might be easier if he is there to answer questions) to the international student office of the school she is attending and asks all her questions there. If the school was supposed to send a document somewhere, the school is the only place she can find out what is currently going on. She should do this ASAP.

Is my B1/B2 USA tourist Visa still valid after getting F2-spouse visa?

Yes, your B visa is still valid at the same time as your F visa. You can have more than one type of US visa - some folks live complicated lives. In the future, after your husband's studies are over and you have returned to live in your own country, when you travel to the US as a tourist just point out the correct visa to the immigration officer as you arrive.

Could my husband go back to USA after being deported?

Why was he deported? If he has any criminal record, he is permanently barred from reentry. With a record of deportation, even without the commission of additional crimes, it's highly unlikely he can get approved for any visa whatsoever. He has already proved he does not abide by immigration laws and/or visa regulations.

Have you & your children been living with your husband in his country of citizenship while he was under bar to reentry to US? If not, you have a very hard time proving this is a viable, committed & ongoing genuine marital relationship.

His children have a right to citizenship in their father's country of citizenship & should have passports from their father's country so they can visit or stay with their father at any time for any length of time, including permanently. If your children have not been living with their father, or visiting regularly, that's your fault for keeping your children from their father.

It's probably best for the whole family to continue to live in the father's country of citizenship. Highly unlikely he can ever return to US after deportation.

If you could qualify to sponsor his spouse visa for US, remember you must earn enough to support yourself, your children, plus husband, and have a home in the US for all of you. If you have used any "benefits" such as welfare, Medicaid, food stamps, etc, for you or the children, you do not qualify - you do not meet support requirements. Currently, you would have to earn $30,000+/year to meet support requirements.

How long does the usa immigrant visa for a spouse IR1 or CR1 normally take? and total cost?

I am a matchmaker and have helped thousands of couples find each other, wWhen marriage results, my couples often ask advice on how to accomplish immigration, and reunite in the USA

For your Spouse to come to America to live here permanently you need to apply for a Spousal visa.

Previously there is some confusion about there being two kinds of spousal visas, K3 and CR1. But K3 is being phased out, so the one to apply for is the CR1 spousal visa.

The CR-1 Spousal Visa Process is as follows:

First of all you have a real courtship and relationship followed by a legal marriage.

You are a US citizen.

You and he, earn over $18,300.

You are able to 'prove' that you have a real, genuine, 'bone fide' relationship. You do this by presenting copies of correspondences, photos, letters, plane tickets from trips together, joint bills, leases, etc.

See my youtube on 'proving your genuine relationship'
http://fianceevisaservices.com/youtubege...

You apply for the visa, to the nearest US consulate in UK. This is called
form I-130 Petition for Alien Relative. You can obtain the forms online, or call the
consulate and request them to mail you the "Spousal Visa Petition package"

Then about 5 to 8 months later your spouse is asked to come to the US consulate to have his interview. If all goes well he is granted the visa, including his Green card, comes to the USA and you can live together in the USA

The total cost is about $1,100 USD

Filing Fee: $355
Affidavit of Support: $70
Visa Application Fee: $400
Medical: $200

Fred Wahl
Matchmaker

Visas for a U.S. citizen going to Italy?

I am an American (journalist) living in Italy and I can tell you that what you want to do is possible but also comes with a series of bureaucratic hoops to jump through as well as the uncertainly of living in a country and not being "legal."

The truth is that a lot of Americans (and other foreigners) are living here and many (most?) do so without official permission from the government. Generally, they don't pay a lot of attentions to Americans who do this but you'll have a lot of limitations on what you can do here -- you won't be able to buy property, including a car, you may have troubles traveling back and forth, etc.

One of the easiest ways to stay here is to prove that you are independently weathly and WON'T be working while your here. Italy doesn't really want more foreigners coming over to take jobs away from Italians. To get a working visa, you'll have to have an employer sponsor you -- giving you a letter that says you are doing a job that no Italian is qualified for, which is why a lot of Americans here teach English. However, you'll have a hard time finding an employer willing to do this -- there's kind of a catch 22 in which you need to be here to get the job but you need to be out of the country to get the visa and most employers won't hire you from abroad because there are enough Americans hanging around here willing to do it without the visa.

I don't mean to sound so negative, I just want to give you a realistic picture of what it takes to come and live here. It's not really all that "Under the Tuscan Sun" made it out to be. I was here for many years without papers and then got lucky and got legal when the Italian state held a mass amnesty (they do this every so often so that they can get illegal immigrants paying taxes). Since then I've married an Italian, which is the best way to stay over here (not possible in your situation I see).

As another poster mentioned, you might be entitled to Italian citizenship but that is a costly, lengthy process and might not suit your situation.

If you'd like some more information please feel free to contact me. Or check out this site: www.informer.it. Good luck with your efforts.

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