Landing interview at Heathrow for allowing land-side transit to Indian nationals with valid US visa
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I'm an Indian national and hold a valid US F1 visa. I'll be travelling from the US to India via Heathrow and have a 23-hour layover at Heathrow airport (arrival at LHR 9:45 AM and departure 8:45 AM the next day), during which time I wish to visit London and rest at a hotel rather than staying at the airport.
I fulfill all conditions to make a land-side Transit Without Visa (TWOV) according to https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/648410/UK_Visa_requirements_Oct_2017.pdf and https://www.gov.uk/check-uk-visa/y/india/transit/somewhere_else/yes. Here are the conditions that I fulfill:
- (iv) arrive and depart by air; and
- (v) have a confirmed onward flight that departs before 23:59 hrs the following day; and
- (vi) hold the correct documents for their destination (e.g. a visa for that country if required) and
- (ii) have a valid visa for entry to Australia, Canada, New Zealand or the USA and a valid airline ticket via the UK as part of a reasonable journey FROM that country.
I read at some blog that a few terminals at Heathrow airport close during night hours and therefore the passengers have no option but to go land-side during long, overnight layovers. So I'm thinking that the airport authorities might cooperate, provided the passenger fulfils all the conditions for TWOV and sounds legitimate during the landing interview.
Does any one have any experience to share on this if they were granted or denied the permission to go land-side at Heathrow Airport without having a Visitor in Transit visa but fulfilling all the above mentioned conditions?
During the landing interview, I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow. So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
(Please excuse me for a lengthy description.)
uk customs-and-immigration transit paperwork lhr
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up vote
6
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I'm an Indian national and hold a valid US F1 visa. I'll be travelling from the US to India via Heathrow and have a 23-hour layover at Heathrow airport (arrival at LHR 9:45 AM and departure 8:45 AM the next day), during which time I wish to visit London and rest at a hotel rather than staying at the airport.
I fulfill all conditions to make a land-side Transit Without Visa (TWOV) according to https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/648410/UK_Visa_requirements_Oct_2017.pdf and https://www.gov.uk/check-uk-visa/y/india/transit/somewhere_else/yes. Here are the conditions that I fulfill:
- (iv) arrive and depart by air; and
- (v) have a confirmed onward flight that departs before 23:59 hrs the following day; and
- (vi) hold the correct documents for their destination (e.g. a visa for that country if required) and
- (ii) have a valid visa for entry to Australia, Canada, New Zealand or the USA and a valid airline ticket via the UK as part of a reasonable journey FROM that country.
I read at some blog that a few terminals at Heathrow airport close during night hours and therefore the passengers have no option but to go land-side during long, overnight layovers. So I'm thinking that the airport authorities might cooperate, provided the passenger fulfils all the conditions for TWOV and sounds legitimate during the landing interview.
Does any one have any experience to share on this if they were granted or denied the permission to go land-side at Heathrow Airport without having a Visitor in Transit visa but fulfilling all the above mentioned conditions?
During the landing interview, I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow. So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
(Please excuse me for a lengthy description.)
uk customs-and-immigration transit paperwork lhr
add a comment |Â
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
I'm an Indian national and hold a valid US F1 visa. I'll be travelling from the US to India via Heathrow and have a 23-hour layover at Heathrow airport (arrival at LHR 9:45 AM and departure 8:45 AM the next day), during which time I wish to visit London and rest at a hotel rather than staying at the airport.
I fulfill all conditions to make a land-side Transit Without Visa (TWOV) according to https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/648410/UK_Visa_requirements_Oct_2017.pdf and https://www.gov.uk/check-uk-visa/y/india/transit/somewhere_else/yes. Here are the conditions that I fulfill:
- (iv) arrive and depart by air; and
- (v) have a confirmed onward flight that departs before 23:59 hrs the following day; and
- (vi) hold the correct documents for their destination (e.g. a visa for that country if required) and
- (ii) have a valid visa for entry to Australia, Canada, New Zealand or the USA and a valid airline ticket via the UK as part of a reasonable journey FROM that country.
I read at some blog that a few terminals at Heathrow airport close during night hours and therefore the passengers have no option but to go land-side during long, overnight layovers. So I'm thinking that the airport authorities might cooperate, provided the passenger fulfils all the conditions for TWOV and sounds legitimate during the landing interview.
Does any one have any experience to share on this if they were granted or denied the permission to go land-side at Heathrow Airport without having a Visitor in Transit visa but fulfilling all the above mentioned conditions?
During the landing interview, I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow. So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
(Please excuse me for a lengthy description.)
uk customs-and-immigration transit paperwork lhr
I'm an Indian national and hold a valid US F1 visa. I'll be travelling from the US to India via Heathrow and have a 23-hour layover at Heathrow airport (arrival at LHR 9:45 AM and departure 8:45 AM the next day), during which time I wish to visit London and rest at a hotel rather than staying at the airport.
I fulfill all conditions to make a land-side Transit Without Visa (TWOV) according to https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/648410/UK_Visa_requirements_Oct_2017.pdf and https://www.gov.uk/check-uk-visa/y/india/transit/somewhere_else/yes. Here are the conditions that I fulfill:
- (iv) arrive and depart by air; and
- (v) have a confirmed onward flight that departs before 23:59 hrs the following day; and
- (vi) hold the correct documents for their destination (e.g. a visa for that country if required) and
- (ii) have a valid visa for entry to Australia, Canada, New Zealand or the USA and a valid airline ticket via the UK as part of a reasonable journey FROM that country.
I read at some blog that a few terminals at Heathrow airport close during night hours and therefore the passengers have no option but to go land-side during long, overnight layovers. So I'm thinking that the airport authorities might cooperate, provided the passenger fulfils all the conditions for TWOV and sounds legitimate during the landing interview.
Does any one have any experience to share on this if they were granted or denied the permission to go land-side at Heathrow Airport without having a Visitor in Transit visa but fulfilling all the above mentioned conditions?
During the landing interview, I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow. So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
(Please excuse me for a lengthy description.)
uk customs-and-immigration transit paperwork lhr
uk customs-and-immigration transit paperwork lhr
edited Nov 28 '17 at 3:24
user67108
asked Nov 28 '17 at 0:34
SKT
332
332
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1 Answer
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I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow.
There is no such thing.
All airport transit areas in the UK close at night, which is why you must enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes.
So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
If presenting the above mentioned documents, they will speak for themselves. Otherwise, just tell them as it is: you have an overnight connection to India.
"which is why you MUST enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes". So I assume that the chances of approval are same with all these mentioned documents as they are with a Transit Visa and in the end it is the immigration officer's decision which will allow me or restrict me to go Land-slide.
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:36
@SKT Yes, but the difference is that if they don't let you enter, you will be sent back to the US, because you simply cannot remain airside overnight. Like I said though, It's very unlikely to happen
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 18:47
I assume you're talking about the difference between having a transit visa and not having a transit visa but all other required documents. So what happens in case when I have a transit visa and they still don't let me enter (as can't stay air-side in both the cases I guess)?
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:58
@SKT No, it's the same in both cases. But really, you're overthinking this. You have everything you need to prove you're a bona fide transit passenger. If presenting everything I listed, you'll probably not even be asked any questions
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 19:00
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow.
There is no such thing.
All airport transit areas in the UK close at night, which is why you must enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes.
So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
If presenting the above mentioned documents, they will speak for themselves. Otherwise, just tell them as it is: you have an overnight connection to India.
"which is why you MUST enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes". So I assume that the chances of approval are same with all these mentioned documents as they are with a Transit Visa and in the end it is the immigration officer's decision which will allow me or restrict me to go Land-slide.
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:36
@SKT Yes, but the difference is that if they don't let you enter, you will be sent back to the US, because you simply cannot remain airside overnight. Like I said though, It's very unlikely to happen
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 18:47
I assume you're talking about the difference between having a transit visa and not having a transit visa but all other required documents. So what happens in case when I have a transit visa and they still don't let me enter (as can't stay air-side in both the cases I guess)?
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:58
@SKT No, it's the same in both cases. But really, you're overthinking this. You have everything you need to prove you're a bona fide transit passenger. If presenting everything I listed, you'll probably not even be asked any questions
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 19:00
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow.
There is no such thing.
All airport transit areas in the UK close at night, which is why you must enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes.
So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
If presenting the above mentioned documents, they will speak for themselves. Otherwise, just tell them as it is: you have an overnight connection to India.
"which is why you MUST enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes". So I assume that the chances of approval are same with all these mentioned documents as they are with a Transit Visa and in the end it is the immigration officer's decision which will allow me or restrict me to go Land-slide.
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:36
@SKT Yes, but the difference is that if they don't let you enter, you will be sent back to the US, because you simply cannot remain airside overnight. Like I said though, It's very unlikely to happen
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 18:47
I assume you're talking about the difference between having a transit visa and not having a transit visa but all other required documents. So what happens in case when I have a transit visa and they still don't let me enter (as can't stay air-side in both the cases I guess)?
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:58
@SKT No, it's the same in both cases. But really, you're overthinking this. You have everything you need to prove you're a bona fide transit passenger. If presenting everything I listed, you'll probably not even be asked any questions
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 19:00
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow.
There is no such thing.
All airport transit areas in the UK close at night, which is why you must enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes.
So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
If presenting the above mentioned documents, they will speak for themselves. Otherwise, just tell them as it is: you have an overnight connection to India.
I plan to say that I wish to rest at an affordable hotel during my transit, but then an immigration officer can always ask me to stay at hotels that are present air-side at Heathrow.
There is no such thing.
All airport transit areas in the UK close at night, which is why you must enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes.
So what are some good things to say or present that will improve my chances of approval during the landing interview when asked about the reasons to go land-side?
If presenting the above mentioned documents, they will speak for themselves. Otherwise, just tell them as it is: you have an overnight connection to India.
answered Nov 28 '17 at 0:47
Coke
48.5k889216
48.5k889216
"which is why you MUST enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes". So I assume that the chances of approval are same with all these mentioned documents as they are with a Transit Visa and in the end it is the immigration officer's decision which will allow me or restrict me to go Land-slide.
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:36
@SKT Yes, but the difference is that if they don't let you enter, you will be sent back to the US, because you simply cannot remain airside overnight. Like I said though, It's very unlikely to happen
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 18:47
I assume you're talking about the difference between having a transit visa and not having a transit visa but all other required documents. So what happens in case when I have a transit visa and they still don't let me enter (as can't stay air-side in both the cases I guess)?
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:58
@SKT No, it's the same in both cases. But really, you're overthinking this. You have everything you need to prove you're a bona fide transit passenger. If presenting everything I listed, you'll probably not even be asked any questions
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 19:00
add a comment |Â
"which is why you MUST enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes". So I assume that the chances of approval are same with all these mentioned documents as they are with a Transit Visa and in the end it is the immigration officer's decision which will allow me or restrict me to go Land-slide.
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:36
@SKT Yes, but the difference is that if they don't let you enter, you will be sent back to the US, because you simply cannot remain airside overnight. Like I said though, It's very unlikely to happen
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 18:47
I assume you're talking about the difference between having a transit visa and not having a transit visa but all other required documents. So what happens in case when I have a transit visa and they still don't let me enter (as can't stay air-side in both the cases I guess)?
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:58
@SKT No, it's the same in both cases. But really, you're overthinking this. You have everything you need to prove you're a bona fide transit passenger. If presenting everything I listed, you'll probably not even be asked any questions
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 19:00
"which is why you MUST enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes". So I assume that the chances of approval are same with all these mentioned documents as they are with a Transit Visa and in the end it is the immigration officer's decision which will allow me or restrict me to go Land-slide.
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:36
"which is why you MUST enter the UK, which you can do by presenting your passport (open at the visa page), filled-out landing card and both boarding passes". So I assume that the chances of approval are same with all these mentioned documents as they are with a Transit Visa and in the end it is the immigration officer's decision which will allow me or restrict me to go Land-slide.
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:36
@SKT Yes, but the difference is that if they don't let you enter, you will be sent back to the US, because you simply cannot remain airside overnight. Like I said though, It's very unlikely to happen
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 18:47
@SKT Yes, but the difference is that if they don't let you enter, you will be sent back to the US, because you simply cannot remain airside overnight. Like I said though, It's very unlikely to happen
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 18:47
I assume you're talking about the difference between having a transit visa and not having a transit visa but all other required documents. So what happens in case when I have a transit visa and they still don't let me enter (as can't stay air-side in both the cases I guess)?
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:58
I assume you're talking about the difference between having a transit visa and not having a transit visa but all other required documents. So what happens in case when I have a transit visa and they still don't let me enter (as can't stay air-side in both the cases I guess)?
â SKT
Nov 28 '17 at 18:58
@SKT No, it's the same in both cases. But really, you're overthinking this. You have everything you need to prove you're a bona fide transit passenger. If presenting everything I listed, you'll probably not even be asked any questions
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 19:00
@SKT No, it's the same in both cases. But really, you're overthinking this. You have everything you need to prove you're a bona fide transit passenger. If presenting everything I listed, you'll probably not even be asked any questions
â Coke
Nov 28 '17 at 19:00
add a comment |Â
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