Is it a problem that I've traveled to the US unemployed, in terms of applying for other visas? [closed]



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I am currently employed and if I can get the visitor visa I will be travelling to the US in March. I am planning to visit the UK in August as well. The potential issue is I will be unemployed in March and will be working around April or May. Do you think that UK EOC would question why I was travelling to the US as an unemployed person and how i was able to afford such a trip?



Edit: I am from Turkey










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closed as primarily opinion-based by Giorgio, Newton, choster, gmauch, Willeke♦ Jul 24 at 19:14


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 2




    The UK ECO will only be interested in your US trip to establish that you complied with your visa restrictions there. They aren't concerned with your employment status so much as whether you can support yourself and whether you will leave the UK on time. Having a job obviously helps with both those concerns.
    – user67901
    Jan 27 at 15:45











  • Why not apply for the UK visa in April, after you get back from the USA? Having a good travel record to G8 countries will work in your benefit.
    – RoboKaren
    Jan 27 at 16:26










  • @RoboKaren I will definitely apply for the UK visa in April if i will be employed then. Actually i had a UK visitor visa 1.5 years ago and not to mention schengen visas. What worries me is a refusal from the US which presumably makes UK ECO alarmed.
    – yozby
    Jan 27 at 16:33










  • VTC: whether a gap in employment might affect a US visa application or refusal that might potentially affect a future UK visa application: pure speculation... no one can predict two unknowns.
    – Giorgio
    Jul 23 at 21:06
















up vote
3
down vote

favorite












I am currently employed and if I can get the visitor visa I will be travelling to the US in March. I am planning to visit the UK in August as well. The potential issue is I will be unemployed in March and will be working around April or May. Do you think that UK EOC would question why I was travelling to the US as an unemployed person and how i was able to afford such a trip?



Edit: I am from Turkey










share|improve this question















closed as primarily opinion-based by Giorgio, Newton, choster, gmauch, Willeke♦ Jul 24 at 19:14


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 2




    The UK ECO will only be interested in your US trip to establish that you complied with your visa restrictions there. They aren't concerned with your employment status so much as whether you can support yourself and whether you will leave the UK on time. Having a job obviously helps with both those concerns.
    – user67901
    Jan 27 at 15:45











  • Why not apply for the UK visa in April, after you get back from the USA? Having a good travel record to G8 countries will work in your benefit.
    – RoboKaren
    Jan 27 at 16:26










  • @RoboKaren I will definitely apply for the UK visa in April if i will be employed then. Actually i had a UK visitor visa 1.5 years ago and not to mention schengen visas. What worries me is a refusal from the US which presumably makes UK ECO alarmed.
    – yozby
    Jan 27 at 16:33










  • VTC: whether a gap in employment might affect a US visa application or refusal that might potentially affect a future UK visa application: pure speculation... no one can predict two unknowns.
    – Giorgio
    Jul 23 at 21:06












up vote
3
down vote

favorite









up vote
3
down vote

favorite











I am currently employed and if I can get the visitor visa I will be travelling to the US in March. I am planning to visit the UK in August as well. The potential issue is I will be unemployed in March and will be working around April or May. Do you think that UK EOC would question why I was travelling to the US as an unemployed person and how i was able to afford such a trip?



Edit: I am from Turkey










share|improve this question















I am currently employed and if I can get the visitor visa I will be travelling to the US in March. I am planning to visit the UK in August as well. The potential issue is I will be unemployed in March and will be working around April or May. Do you think that UK EOC would question why I was travelling to the US as an unemployed person and how i was able to afford such a trip?



Edit: I am from Turkey







visas usa uk turkish-citizens






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 8 at 0:04









Mark Mayo♦

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128k745511263










asked Jan 27 at 15:14









yozby

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263




closed as primarily opinion-based by Giorgio, Newton, choster, gmauch, Willeke♦ Jul 24 at 19:14


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as primarily opinion-based by Giorgio, Newton, choster, gmauch, Willeke♦ Jul 24 at 19:14


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 2




    The UK ECO will only be interested in your US trip to establish that you complied with your visa restrictions there. They aren't concerned with your employment status so much as whether you can support yourself and whether you will leave the UK on time. Having a job obviously helps with both those concerns.
    – user67901
    Jan 27 at 15:45











  • Why not apply for the UK visa in April, after you get back from the USA? Having a good travel record to G8 countries will work in your benefit.
    – RoboKaren
    Jan 27 at 16:26










  • @RoboKaren I will definitely apply for the UK visa in April if i will be employed then. Actually i had a UK visitor visa 1.5 years ago and not to mention schengen visas. What worries me is a refusal from the US which presumably makes UK ECO alarmed.
    – yozby
    Jan 27 at 16:33










  • VTC: whether a gap in employment might affect a US visa application or refusal that might potentially affect a future UK visa application: pure speculation... no one can predict two unknowns.
    – Giorgio
    Jul 23 at 21:06












  • 2




    The UK ECO will only be interested in your US trip to establish that you complied with your visa restrictions there. They aren't concerned with your employment status so much as whether you can support yourself and whether you will leave the UK on time. Having a job obviously helps with both those concerns.
    – user67901
    Jan 27 at 15:45











  • Why not apply for the UK visa in April, after you get back from the USA? Having a good travel record to G8 countries will work in your benefit.
    – RoboKaren
    Jan 27 at 16:26










  • @RoboKaren I will definitely apply for the UK visa in April if i will be employed then. Actually i had a UK visitor visa 1.5 years ago and not to mention schengen visas. What worries me is a refusal from the US which presumably makes UK ECO alarmed.
    – yozby
    Jan 27 at 16:33










  • VTC: whether a gap in employment might affect a US visa application or refusal that might potentially affect a future UK visa application: pure speculation... no one can predict two unknowns.
    – Giorgio
    Jul 23 at 21:06







2




2




The UK ECO will only be interested in your US trip to establish that you complied with your visa restrictions there. They aren't concerned with your employment status so much as whether you can support yourself and whether you will leave the UK on time. Having a job obviously helps with both those concerns.
– user67901
Jan 27 at 15:45





The UK ECO will only be interested in your US trip to establish that you complied with your visa restrictions there. They aren't concerned with your employment status so much as whether you can support yourself and whether you will leave the UK on time. Having a job obviously helps with both those concerns.
– user67901
Jan 27 at 15:45













Why not apply for the UK visa in April, after you get back from the USA? Having a good travel record to G8 countries will work in your benefit.
– RoboKaren
Jan 27 at 16:26




Why not apply for the UK visa in April, after you get back from the USA? Having a good travel record to G8 countries will work in your benefit.
– RoboKaren
Jan 27 at 16:26












@RoboKaren I will definitely apply for the UK visa in April if i will be employed then. Actually i had a UK visitor visa 1.5 years ago and not to mention schengen visas. What worries me is a refusal from the US which presumably makes UK ECO alarmed.
– yozby
Jan 27 at 16:33




@RoboKaren I will definitely apply for the UK visa in April if i will be employed then. Actually i had a UK visitor visa 1.5 years ago and not to mention schengen visas. What worries me is a refusal from the US which presumably makes UK ECO alarmed.
– yozby
Jan 27 at 16:33












VTC: whether a gap in employment might affect a US visa application or refusal that might potentially affect a future UK visa application: pure speculation... no one can predict two unknowns.
– Giorgio
Jul 23 at 21:06




VTC: whether a gap in employment might affect a US visa application or refusal that might potentially affect a future UK visa application: pure speculation... no one can predict two unknowns.
– Giorgio
Jul 23 at 21:06















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