Schengen visa overstay



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I got a Schengen visa for 25 days with a duration of stay of only 10 days, which I did not see on my passport. And I stayed there for 23 days. Now they are not giving me a visa again. What should I do? Will it affect my application for a UK visa?










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    up vote
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    down vote

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    I got a Schengen visa for 25 days with a duration of stay of only 10 days, which I did not see on my passport. And I stayed there for 23 days. Now they are not giving me a visa again. What should I do? Will it affect my application for a UK visa?










    share|improve this question

























      up vote
      2
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      2
      down vote

      favorite











      I got a Schengen visa for 25 days with a duration of stay of only 10 days, which I did not see on my passport. And I stayed there for 23 days. Now they are not giving me a visa again. What should I do? Will it affect my application for a UK visa?










      share|improve this question















      I got a Schengen visa for 25 days with a duration of stay of only 10 days, which I did not see on my passport. And I stayed there for 23 days. Now they are not giving me a visa again. What should I do? Will it affect my application for a UK visa?







      overstaying






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      edited Dec 8 '17 at 12:52







      user67108

















      asked Dec 8 '17 at 12:35









      Manpreet

      111




      111




















          1 Answer
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          up vote
          1
          down vote













          Unfortunately, there is not much you can do to overcome this easily. Among the possibilities:



          • Waiting. You did not get a lifetime ban or anything, this minor infringement is just one of the factors going into the decision. As time passes and especially if you are able to document a stable situation in your country of residence (buying a house, founding a family…), you will be more likely to get a visa.

          • Travel to other countries. A history of travel to other countries will look reassuring to consular officers. If you are someone who travels a lot and had many occasion to (over)stay in a (rich) country but did not do it, you will appear less likely to abuse a visa. On the other hand, a recent overstay in the Schengen area might very well adversely impact other visa applications, including to the UK.

          • Move to Europe. If you have a good reason to move to a Schengen country (family, sponsored job…) and manage to get a residence permit (not easy, obviously!), the short-stay rules become essentially irrelevant. You will be able to leave and enter the area without worrying about your earlier violation of the rules.

          • Change citizenship. Not really a practical strategy or something you should consider just to overcome this but acquiring the nationality of a country whose citizens do not need a visa would make it much easier to enter.





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          • 3




            why was this downvoted? Looks like a reasonable solution.
            – greatone
            Dec 8 '17 at 16:44










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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          1
          down vote













          Unfortunately, there is not much you can do to overcome this easily. Among the possibilities:



          • Waiting. You did not get a lifetime ban or anything, this minor infringement is just one of the factors going into the decision. As time passes and especially if you are able to document a stable situation in your country of residence (buying a house, founding a family…), you will be more likely to get a visa.

          • Travel to other countries. A history of travel to other countries will look reassuring to consular officers. If you are someone who travels a lot and had many occasion to (over)stay in a (rich) country but did not do it, you will appear less likely to abuse a visa. On the other hand, a recent overstay in the Schengen area might very well adversely impact other visa applications, including to the UK.

          • Move to Europe. If you have a good reason to move to a Schengen country (family, sponsored job…) and manage to get a residence permit (not easy, obviously!), the short-stay rules become essentially irrelevant. You will be able to leave and enter the area without worrying about your earlier violation of the rules.

          • Change citizenship. Not really a practical strategy or something you should consider just to overcome this but acquiring the nationality of a country whose citizens do not need a visa would make it much easier to enter.





          share|improve this answer


















          • 3




            why was this downvoted? Looks like a reasonable solution.
            – greatone
            Dec 8 '17 at 16:44














          up vote
          1
          down vote













          Unfortunately, there is not much you can do to overcome this easily. Among the possibilities:



          • Waiting. You did not get a lifetime ban or anything, this minor infringement is just one of the factors going into the decision. As time passes and especially if you are able to document a stable situation in your country of residence (buying a house, founding a family…), you will be more likely to get a visa.

          • Travel to other countries. A history of travel to other countries will look reassuring to consular officers. If you are someone who travels a lot and had many occasion to (over)stay in a (rich) country but did not do it, you will appear less likely to abuse a visa. On the other hand, a recent overstay in the Schengen area might very well adversely impact other visa applications, including to the UK.

          • Move to Europe. If you have a good reason to move to a Schengen country (family, sponsored job…) and manage to get a residence permit (not easy, obviously!), the short-stay rules become essentially irrelevant. You will be able to leave and enter the area without worrying about your earlier violation of the rules.

          • Change citizenship. Not really a practical strategy or something you should consider just to overcome this but acquiring the nationality of a country whose citizens do not need a visa would make it much easier to enter.





          share|improve this answer


















          • 3




            why was this downvoted? Looks like a reasonable solution.
            – greatone
            Dec 8 '17 at 16:44












          up vote
          1
          down vote










          up vote
          1
          down vote









          Unfortunately, there is not much you can do to overcome this easily. Among the possibilities:



          • Waiting. You did not get a lifetime ban or anything, this minor infringement is just one of the factors going into the decision. As time passes and especially if you are able to document a stable situation in your country of residence (buying a house, founding a family…), you will be more likely to get a visa.

          • Travel to other countries. A history of travel to other countries will look reassuring to consular officers. If you are someone who travels a lot and had many occasion to (over)stay in a (rich) country but did not do it, you will appear less likely to abuse a visa. On the other hand, a recent overstay in the Schengen area might very well adversely impact other visa applications, including to the UK.

          • Move to Europe. If you have a good reason to move to a Schengen country (family, sponsored job…) and manage to get a residence permit (not easy, obviously!), the short-stay rules become essentially irrelevant. You will be able to leave and enter the area without worrying about your earlier violation of the rules.

          • Change citizenship. Not really a practical strategy or something you should consider just to overcome this but acquiring the nationality of a country whose citizens do not need a visa would make it much easier to enter.





          share|improve this answer














          Unfortunately, there is not much you can do to overcome this easily. Among the possibilities:



          • Waiting. You did not get a lifetime ban or anything, this minor infringement is just one of the factors going into the decision. As time passes and especially if you are able to document a stable situation in your country of residence (buying a house, founding a family…), you will be more likely to get a visa.

          • Travel to other countries. A history of travel to other countries will look reassuring to consular officers. If you are someone who travels a lot and had many occasion to (over)stay in a (rich) country but did not do it, you will appear less likely to abuse a visa. On the other hand, a recent overstay in the Schengen area might very well adversely impact other visa applications, including to the UK.

          • Move to Europe. If you have a good reason to move to a Schengen country (family, sponsored job…) and manage to get a residence permit (not easy, obviously!), the short-stay rules become essentially irrelevant. You will be able to leave and enter the area without worrying about your earlier violation of the rules.

          • Change citizenship. Not really a practical strategy or something you should consider just to overcome this but acquiring the nationality of a country whose citizens do not need a visa would make it much easier to enter.






          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 8 '17 at 16:45

























          answered Dec 8 '17 at 13:59









          Relaxed

          75.3k10147280




          75.3k10147280







          • 3




            why was this downvoted? Looks like a reasonable solution.
            – greatone
            Dec 8 '17 at 16:44












          • 3




            why was this downvoted? Looks like a reasonable solution.
            – greatone
            Dec 8 '17 at 16:44







          3




          3




          why was this downvoted? Looks like a reasonable solution.
          – greatone
          Dec 8 '17 at 16:44




          why was this downvoted? Looks like a reasonable solution.
          – greatone
          Dec 8 '17 at 16:44

















           

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