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Venezuelan girlfriend wants to travel the USA to be with me. What is the process?


Can my Venezuelan girlfriend take connecting flights within the US to get home?Getting my girlfriend from Moscow to Jamaica bypassing the USA (no visa)What is the detailed Process of getting Schengen Visa by locking money for verpflichtungserklärung?Tourist trip to USA while girlfriend works there - what to expect at border check?What if my Filipina girlfriend is denied admissionTravel to Colombia connecting through the USAVisit, student, fiancée visa for the UKWhen can my mother reenter the USA after a 5-month stay?Can I vacation with my girlfriend who is already in the USA?Is it possible to enter the Schengen area as a tourist while a German work visa request is in process?













7















My Venezuelan girlfriend wants to travel to the USA to be with me. How difficult and expensive will it become and what should she do to attain this task?










share|improve this question









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guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 2





    For a short visit, or to stay in the USA for an indeterminate length of time?

    – vsz
    46 mins ago















7















My Venezuelan girlfriend wants to travel to the USA to be with me. How difficult and expensive will it become and what should she do to attain this task?










share|improve this question









New contributor




guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 2





    For a short visit, or to stay in the USA for an indeterminate length of time?

    – vsz
    46 mins ago













7












7








7


1






My Venezuelan girlfriend wants to travel to the USA to be with me. How difficult and expensive will it become and what should she do to attain this task?










share|improve this question









New contributor




guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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My Venezuelan girlfriend wants to travel to the USA to be with me. How difficult and expensive will it become and what should she do to attain this task?







visas usa venezuelan-citizens






share|improve this question









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guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




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edited 1 hour ago









200_success

2,53011828




2,53011828






New contributor




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asked 4 hours ago









guy C ellisguy C ellis

36




36




New contributor




guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






guy C ellis is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 2





    For a short visit, or to stay in the USA for an indeterminate length of time?

    – vsz
    46 mins ago












  • 2





    For a short visit, or to stay in the USA for an indeterminate length of time?

    – vsz
    46 mins ago







2




2





For a short visit, or to stay in the USA for an indeterminate length of time?

– vsz
46 mins ago





For a short visit, or to stay in the USA for an indeterminate length of time?

– vsz
46 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















14














First, she needs to get out of the country. https://ve.usembassy.gov/visas/ says:




On March 11, 2019, the Department of State announced the temporary suspension of operations of U.S. Embassy Caracas and withdrawal of diplomatic personnel. All consular services are suspended. Immigrant visa applicants should contact IVBogota@state.gov for additional instructions. Nonimmigrant visa applicants can apply at any U.S. embassy or consulate in another country. For more information regarding applying for nonimmigrant visas, please visit travel.state.gov.




Then usual procedures apply which include proving ties to her residency, including family, jobs etc. If she resides in Venezuela, at this time I have serious doubts she'd be able to prove this. There's no formal ban, just a huge amount of suspicion about whether the visitors are genuine.



In fact, according to some news reports the US last year already was revoking tourist visas and another article also said




Venezuelans say they’re already seeing a drastic reduction in the number of U.S. visitor visas they’re being granted – and that the visas they have are often being revoked.




If by "be with you" you mean marriage and you have the funds to do so, I very cautiously would recommend getting her to Peru or another visa friendly country (at least it seems those flights are still operational) and apply for a K-1 visa or even getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple. Researching these options are far beyond the scope of this answer, I am afraid.



But I have a few ideas: I said Peru above because has a USCIS field office and it's the field office which handles such affairs for Venezuela. This might be beneficial or it might not be depending what you file and where. Also, looking at other field offices I can't see any other places accessible by direct flight where she could stay for six months without a visa. And here's a blog post about foreigners marrying in Peru. So: maybe Peru. Maybe. Don't take life altering advice from a random stranger on the Internet (like me). Lawyers who can help with this will be costly but a misstep might cause months of delay (or worse, ruin the whole thing). The process will take 1-2 years most likely.



But if you want more advice from internet strangers, marriage questions belong to expats.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    "getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple" would require OP remaining out of the US for probably a year or two.

    – phoog
    2 hours ago











  • @phoog: I don't follow. Having the I-130 processed outside the US would usually require OP to remain in the country where it was being processed for the duration, but that could be as short as 4-5 months or up to a year or two. OP could of course opt to file in the US and only later travel out and back together.

    – R..
    21 mins ago











  • @R.. I don't see how filing in the US could be consistent with "get married and return together" as an alternative plan to the K-1. To file directly for immigration, they need to be marred already. As to the duration of the wait for consular processing, I did say "probably." It could be shorter than a year, but it seems that it would be unwise to count on that.

    – phoog
    10 mins ago












  • Stop this chat here, if OP wants to marry he needs to ask on expats and then we can give some advice there.

    – chx
    7 mins ago











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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









14














First, she needs to get out of the country. https://ve.usembassy.gov/visas/ says:




On March 11, 2019, the Department of State announced the temporary suspension of operations of U.S. Embassy Caracas and withdrawal of diplomatic personnel. All consular services are suspended. Immigrant visa applicants should contact IVBogota@state.gov for additional instructions. Nonimmigrant visa applicants can apply at any U.S. embassy or consulate in another country. For more information regarding applying for nonimmigrant visas, please visit travel.state.gov.




Then usual procedures apply which include proving ties to her residency, including family, jobs etc. If she resides in Venezuela, at this time I have serious doubts she'd be able to prove this. There's no formal ban, just a huge amount of suspicion about whether the visitors are genuine.



In fact, according to some news reports the US last year already was revoking tourist visas and another article also said




Venezuelans say they’re already seeing a drastic reduction in the number of U.S. visitor visas they’re being granted – and that the visas they have are often being revoked.




If by "be with you" you mean marriage and you have the funds to do so, I very cautiously would recommend getting her to Peru or another visa friendly country (at least it seems those flights are still operational) and apply for a K-1 visa or even getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple. Researching these options are far beyond the scope of this answer, I am afraid.



But I have a few ideas: I said Peru above because has a USCIS field office and it's the field office which handles such affairs for Venezuela. This might be beneficial or it might not be depending what you file and where. Also, looking at other field offices I can't see any other places accessible by direct flight where she could stay for six months without a visa. And here's a blog post about foreigners marrying in Peru. So: maybe Peru. Maybe. Don't take life altering advice from a random stranger on the Internet (like me). Lawyers who can help with this will be costly but a misstep might cause months of delay (or worse, ruin the whole thing). The process will take 1-2 years most likely.



But if you want more advice from internet strangers, marriage questions belong to expats.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    "getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple" would require OP remaining out of the US for probably a year or two.

    – phoog
    2 hours ago











  • @phoog: I don't follow. Having the I-130 processed outside the US would usually require OP to remain in the country where it was being processed for the duration, but that could be as short as 4-5 months or up to a year or two. OP could of course opt to file in the US and only later travel out and back together.

    – R..
    21 mins ago











  • @R.. I don't see how filing in the US could be consistent with "get married and return together" as an alternative plan to the K-1. To file directly for immigration, they need to be marred already. As to the duration of the wait for consular processing, I did say "probably." It could be shorter than a year, but it seems that it would be unwise to count on that.

    – phoog
    10 mins ago












  • Stop this chat here, if OP wants to marry he needs to ask on expats and then we can give some advice there.

    – chx
    7 mins ago















14














First, she needs to get out of the country. https://ve.usembassy.gov/visas/ says:




On March 11, 2019, the Department of State announced the temporary suspension of operations of U.S. Embassy Caracas and withdrawal of diplomatic personnel. All consular services are suspended. Immigrant visa applicants should contact IVBogota@state.gov for additional instructions. Nonimmigrant visa applicants can apply at any U.S. embassy or consulate in another country. For more information regarding applying for nonimmigrant visas, please visit travel.state.gov.




Then usual procedures apply which include proving ties to her residency, including family, jobs etc. If she resides in Venezuela, at this time I have serious doubts she'd be able to prove this. There's no formal ban, just a huge amount of suspicion about whether the visitors are genuine.



In fact, according to some news reports the US last year already was revoking tourist visas and another article also said




Venezuelans say they’re already seeing a drastic reduction in the number of U.S. visitor visas they’re being granted – and that the visas they have are often being revoked.




If by "be with you" you mean marriage and you have the funds to do so, I very cautiously would recommend getting her to Peru or another visa friendly country (at least it seems those flights are still operational) and apply for a K-1 visa or even getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple. Researching these options are far beyond the scope of this answer, I am afraid.



But I have a few ideas: I said Peru above because has a USCIS field office and it's the field office which handles such affairs for Venezuela. This might be beneficial or it might not be depending what you file and where. Also, looking at other field offices I can't see any other places accessible by direct flight where she could stay for six months without a visa. And here's a blog post about foreigners marrying in Peru. So: maybe Peru. Maybe. Don't take life altering advice from a random stranger on the Internet (like me). Lawyers who can help with this will be costly but a misstep might cause months of delay (or worse, ruin the whole thing). The process will take 1-2 years most likely.



But if you want more advice from internet strangers, marriage questions belong to expats.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    "getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple" would require OP remaining out of the US for probably a year or two.

    – phoog
    2 hours ago











  • @phoog: I don't follow. Having the I-130 processed outside the US would usually require OP to remain in the country where it was being processed for the duration, but that could be as short as 4-5 months or up to a year or two. OP could of course opt to file in the US and only later travel out and back together.

    – R..
    21 mins ago











  • @R.. I don't see how filing in the US could be consistent with "get married and return together" as an alternative plan to the K-1. To file directly for immigration, they need to be marred already. As to the duration of the wait for consular processing, I did say "probably." It could be shorter than a year, but it seems that it would be unwise to count on that.

    – phoog
    10 mins ago












  • Stop this chat here, if OP wants to marry he needs to ask on expats and then we can give some advice there.

    – chx
    7 mins ago













14












14








14







First, she needs to get out of the country. https://ve.usembassy.gov/visas/ says:




On March 11, 2019, the Department of State announced the temporary suspension of operations of U.S. Embassy Caracas and withdrawal of diplomatic personnel. All consular services are suspended. Immigrant visa applicants should contact IVBogota@state.gov for additional instructions. Nonimmigrant visa applicants can apply at any U.S. embassy or consulate in another country. For more information regarding applying for nonimmigrant visas, please visit travel.state.gov.




Then usual procedures apply which include proving ties to her residency, including family, jobs etc. If she resides in Venezuela, at this time I have serious doubts she'd be able to prove this. There's no formal ban, just a huge amount of suspicion about whether the visitors are genuine.



In fact, according to some news reports the US last year already was revoking tourist visas and another article also said




Venezuelans say they’re already seeing a drastic reduction in the number of U.S. visitor visas they’re being granted – and that the visas they have are often being revoked.




If by "be with you" you mean marriage and you have the funds to do so, I very cautiously would recommend getting her to Peru or another visa friendly country (at least it seems those flights are still operational) and apply for a K-1 visa or even getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple. Researching these options are far beyond the scope of this answer, I am afraid.



But I have a few ideas: I said Peru above because has a USCIS field office and it's the field office which handles such affairs for Venezuela. This might be beneficial or it might not be depending what you file and where. Also, looking at other field offices I can't see any other places accessible by direct flight where she could stay for six months without a visa. And here's a blog post about foreigners marrying in Peru. So: maybe Peru. Maybe. Don't take life altering advice from a random stranger on the Internet (like me). Lawyers who can help with this will be costly but a misstep might cause months of delay (or worse, ruin the whole thing). The process will take 1-2 years most likely.



But if you want more advice from internet strangers, marriage questions belong to expats.






share|improve this answer















First, she needs to get out of the country. https://ve.usembassy.gov/visas/ says:




On March 11, 2019, the Department of State announced the temporary suspension of operations of U.S. Embassy Caracas and withdrawal of diplomatic personnel. All consular services are suspended. Immigrant visa applicants should contact IVBogota@state.gov for additional instructions. Nonimmigrant visa applicants can apply at any U.S. embassy or consulate in another country. For more information regarding applying for nonimmigrant visas, please visit travel.state.gov.




Then usual procedures apply which include proving ties to her residency, including family, jobs etc. If she resides in Venezuela, at this time I have serious doubts she'd be able to prove this. There's no formal ban, just a huge amount of suspicion about whether the visitors are genuine.



In fact, according to some news reports the US last year already was revoking tourist visas and another article also said




Venezuelans say they’re already seeing a drastic reduction in the number of U.S. visitor visas they’re being granted – and that the visas they have are often being revoked.




If by "be with you" you mean marriage and you have the funds to do so, I very cautiously would recommend getting her to Peru or another visa friendly country (at least it seems those flights are still operational) and apply for a K-1 visa or even getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple. Researching these options are far beyond the scope of this answer, I am afraid.



But I have a few ideas: I said Peru above because has a USCIS field office and it's the field office which handles such affairs for Venezuela. This might be beneficial or it might not be depending what you file and where. Also, looking at other field offices I can't see any other places accessible by direct flight where she could stay for six months without a visa. And here's a blog post about foreigners marrying in Peru. So: maybe Peru. Maybe. Don't take life altering advice from a random stranger on the Internet (like me). Lawyers who can help with this will be costly but a misstep might cause months of delay (or worse, ruin the whole thing). The process will take 1-2 years most likely.



But if you want more advice from internet strangers, marriage questions belong to expats.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 5 mins ago

























answered 4 hours ago









chxchx

38.7k483190




38.7k483190







  • 2





    "getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple" would require OP remaining out of the US for probably a year or two.

    – phoog
    2 hours ago











  • @phoog: I don't follow. Having the I-130 processed outside the US would usually require OP to remain in the country where it was being processed for the duration, but that could be as short as 4-5 months or up to a year or two. OP could of course opt to file in the US and only later travel out and back together.

    – R..
    21 mins ago











  • @R.. I don't see how filing in the US could be consistent with "get married and return together" as an alternative plan to the K-1. To file directly for immigration, they need to be marred already. As to the duration of the wait for consular processing, I did say "probably." It could be shorter than a year, but it seems that it would be unwise to count on that.

    – phoog
    10 mins ago












  • Stop this chat here, if OP wants to marry he needs to ask on expats and then we can give some advice there.

    – chx
    7 mins ago












  • 2





    "getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple" would require OP remaining out of the US for probably a year or two.

    – phoog
    2 hours ago











  • @phoog: I don't follow. Having the I-130 processed outside the US would usually require OP to remain in the country where it was being processed for the duration, but that could be as short as 4-5 months or up to a year or two. OP could of course opt to file in the US and only later travel out and back together.

    – R..
    21 mins ago











  • @R.. I don't see how filing in the US could be consistent with "get married and return together" as an alternative plan to the K-1. To file directly for immigration, they need to be marred already. As to the duration of the wait for consular processing, I did say "probably." It could be shorter than a year, but it seems that it would be unwise to count on that.

    – phoog
    10 mins ago












  • Stop this chat here, if OP wants to marry he needs to ask on expats and then we can give some advice there.

    – chx
    7 mins ago







2




2





"getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple" would require OP remaining out of the US for probably a year or two.

– phoog
2 hours ago





"getting married there and returning to the United States as a couple" would require OP remaining out of the US for probably a year or two.

– phoog
2 hours ago













@phoog: I don't follow. Having the I-130 processed outside the US would usually require OP to remain in the country where it was being processed for the duration, but that could be as short as 4-5 months or up to a year or two. OP could of course opt to file in the US and only later travel out and back together.

– R..
21 mins ago





@phoog: I don't follow. Having the I-130 processed outside the US would usually require OP to remain in the country where it was being processed for the duration, but that could be as short as 4-5 months or up to a year or two. OP could of course opt to file in the US and only later travel out and back together.

– R..
21 mins ago













@R.. I don't see how filing in the US could be consistent with "get married and return together" as an alternative plan to the K-1. To file directly for immigration, they need to be marred already. As to the duration of the wait for consular processing, I did say "probably." It could be shorter than a year, but it seems that it would be unwise to count on that.

– phoog
10 mins ago






@R.. I don't see how filing in the US could be consistent with "get married and return together" as an alternative plan to the K-1. To file directly for immigration, they need to be marred already. As to the duration of the wait for consular processing, I did say "probably." It could be shorter than a year, but it seems that it would be unwise to count on that.

– phoog
10 mins ago














Stop this chat here, if OP wants to marry he needs to ask on expats and then we can give some advice there.

– chx
7 mins ago





Stop this chat here, if OP wants to marry he needs to ask on expats and then we can give some advice there.

– chx
7 mins ago










guy C ellis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









draft saved

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guy C ellis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












guy C ellis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











guy C ellis is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














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