Applying for a Schengen visa from Sri Lanka
I am planing to travel to Amsterdam on September 20th-25th. I would like to clarify some points regarding the visa process.
First one is: can I show a hotel reservation from booking.com (free cancellation, pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
I am currently an undergraduate. I will be graduating at the end of this year after four years of studying. I can show university letters. Will that be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country?
Is it required to have properties and deeds? My parents live in Dubai, still all the properties belong to them legally. They send my expenses every month. This time they sent extra money for the trip. Do I need to prove that I got money from my parent as a gift (to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?
I currently have 1200 euros in a bank account (1350 US dollars). Will that be enough? Also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a gift (he is travelling with me). Do I need to provide a letter from him too?
- ticket cost = 372 euro
- hotel cost = 200 euro (twin base sharing one person cost)
schengen money amsterdam proof-of-funds booking.com
add a comment |
I am planing to travel to Amsterdam on September 20th-25th. I would like to clarify some points regarding the visa process.
First one is: can I show a hotel reservation from booking.com (free cancellation, pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
I am currently an undergraduate. I will be graduating at the end of this year after four years of studying. I can show university letters. Will that be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country?
Is it required to have properties and deeds? My parents live in Dubai, still all the properties belong to them legally. They send my expenses every month. This time they sent extra money for the trip. Do I need to prove that I got money from my parent as a gift (to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?
I currently have 1200 euros in a bank account (1350 US dollars). Will that be enough? Also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a gift (he is travelling with me). Do I need to provide a letter from him too?
- ticket cost = 372 euro
- hotel cost = 200 euro (twin base sharing one person cost)
schengen money amsterdam proof-of-funds booking.com
+1 for the question, but per the answer below your circumstances and lifestyle are problematic. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/someone-answers vis-a-vis the answer below, thanks
– Gayot Fow
Aug 7 '16 at 23:43
As for the money: Calculate around 30 Euros for food (fast food/ supermarket) or around 60 (restaurant) per day and person, 10 per day for public transport (inside a city, more for inter-city trips), 15 for a single museum entrance, something for souvenirs.,... Plus you should have enough money left when you come back home.
– TheEspinosa
Aug 8 '16 at 9:24
add a comment |
I am planing to travel to Amsterdam on September 20th-25th. I would like to clarify some points regarding the visa process.
First one is: can I show a hotel reservation from booking.com (free cancellation, pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
I am currently an undergraduate. I will be graduating at the end of this year after four years of studying. I can show university letters. Will that be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country?
Is it required to have properties and deeds? My parents live in Dubai, still all the properties belong to them legally. They send my expenses every month. This time they sent extra money for the trip. Do I need to prove that I got money from my parent as a gift (to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?
I currently have 1200 euros in a bank account (1350 US dollars). Will that be enough? Also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a gift (he is travelling with me). Do I need to provide a letter from him too?
- ticket cost = 372 euro
- hotel cost = 200 euro (twin base sharing one person cost)
schengen money amsterdam proof-of-funds booking.com
I am planing to travel to Amsterdam on September 20th-25th. I would like to clarify some points regarding the visa process.
First one is: can I show a hotel reservation from booking.com (free cancellation, pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
I am currently an undergraduate. I will be graduating at the end of this year after four years of studying. I can show university letters. Will that be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country?
Is it required to have properties and deeds? My parents live in Dubai, still all the properties belong to them legally. They send my expenses every month. This time they sent extra money for the trip. Do I need to prove that I got money from my parent as a gift (to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?
I currently have 1200 euros in a bank account (1350 US dollars). Will that be enough? Also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a gift (he is travelling with me). Do I need to provide a letter from him too?
- ticket cost = 372 euro
- hotel cost = 200 euro (twin base sharing one person cost)
schengen money amsterdam proof-of-funds booking.com
schengen money amsterdam proof-of-funds booking.com
edited Aug 8 '16 at 9:54
Mat
1176
1176
asked Aug 7 '16 at 19:56
DinukDinuk
75113
75113
+1 for the question, but per the answer below your circumstances and lifestyle are problematic. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/someone-answers vis-a-vis the answer below, thanks
– Gayot Fow
Aug 7 '16 at 23:43
As for the money: Calculate around 30 Euros for food (fast food/ supermarket) or around 60 (restaurant) per day and person, 10 per day for public transport (inside a city, more for inter-city trips), 15 for a single museum entrance, something for souvenirs.,... Plus you should have enough money left when you come back home.
– TheEspinosa
Aug 8 '16 at 9:24
add a comment |
+1 for the question, but per the answer below your circumstances and lifestyle are problematic. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/someone-answers vis-a-vis the answer below, thanks
– Gayot Fow
Aug 7 '16 at 23:43
As for the money: Calculate around 30 Euros for food (fast food/ supermarket) or around 60 (restaurant) per day and person, 10 per day for public transport (inside a city, more for inter-city trips), 15 for a single museum entrance, something for souvenirs.,... Plus you should have enough money left when you come back home.
– TheEspinosa
Aug 8 '16 at 9:24
+1 for the question, but per the answer below your circumstances and lifestyle are problematic. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/someone-answers vis-a-vis the answer below, thanks
– Gayot Fow
Aug 7 '16 at 23:43
+1 for the question, but per the answer below your circumstances and lifestyle are problematic. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/someone-answers vis-a-vis the answer below, thanks
– Gayot Fow
Aug 7 '16 at 23:43
As for the money: Calculate around 30 Euros for food (fast food/ supermarket) or around 60 (restaurant) per day and person, 10 per day for public transport (inside a city, more for inter-city trips), 15 for a single museum entrance, something for souvenirs.,... Plus you should have enough money left when you come back home.
– TheEspinosa
Aug 8 '16 at 9:24
As for the money: Calculate around 30 Euros for food (fast food/ supermarket) or around 60 (restaurant) per day and person, 10 per day for public transport (inside a city, more for inter-city trips), 15 for a single museum entrance, something for souvenirs.,... Plus you should have enough money left when you come back home.
– TheEspinosa
Aug 8 '16 at 9:24
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
You're going to have trouble.
The hotel reservation is not a problem -- if everything else checks out, all that is needed is that you have a concrete and realistic idea of where you're going to sleep and what it will cost.
It's the everything else that's a problem. What you don't mention here that you have a very recent visa refusal from France. And now you're suddenly going to the Netherlands instead. This is most certainly going to raise eyebrows -- it paints a picture of you and your friend "consulate-shopping" in the hope of finding a Schengen country, any Schengen country, that will let you in. And this again will make it look doubtful that your real intentions are just a short tourist trip.
Keep in mind that ultimately what the consular officer is looking for is not a rigid checklist of this or that documentation being present, but convincing evidence that you're not planning to immigrate illegally, overstay, and try to find work in Europe.
Most of what you write will easily support such a suspicion. Your friend (romantic partner? since he funds your airfare) is a software engineer, which is a skill sufficiently in demand that he might hope to find qualified work in Europe even illegally. You're supported by your parents, but they're not where you are (so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!), and you seem to have only quite weak ties to your home country. It would help if you can demonstrate that the undergraduate degree you're about to earn is an exclusive and prestigious one that will significantly increase your chances of a well-paid job in your home country; otherwise it may not be very convincing to a consular officer who has seen it all. (And apparently it didn't convince the French).
Also, being supported by your parents, you need to document their economy with income and bank statements, to make it seem realistic that they would choose to pay for your gallivanting around in Europe as a tourist (rather than considering the outlay an investment in you seeking a better life there).
All in all, it looks likely that you simply are not in a position in life now that will qualify you for a visa, no matter how much you document. Why not shoot for a different holiday destination with fewer barriers, and save Europe for when you're settled with stronger ties to your community?
1
While answer is good there is quite a bit of sarcasm in this reply. Hence my downvote. We can do away with statements like "so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!". It has no place on stack exchange.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 5:44
13
@NotAgain I don't find it particularly sarcastic. The parenthetical comment illustrates the kind of thinking one might expect from the official who is evaluating the visa application. These officials are required to view applications with high skepticism, under a presumption that the applicant intend to violate the terms of the visa by immigrating. An official who didn't draw the conclusion set out in this answer would likely not be doing his or her job properly.
– phoog
Aug 8 '16 at 5:49
What is rude remains rude. Does not matter if visa officer thinks like that. Anyways I have spoken what I felt after reading this reply. I might be a bit over sensitive or suffering Monday blues.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 6:11
7
@NotAgain - It specifically does matter if the visa officer thinks like that. Henning is attempted to show the decision making processes that the officer will go through, and how it will effect the decision making process.
– CMaster
Aug 8 '16 at 8:38
4
@phoog What you consider sarcastic, I consider vital information that could not be expressed better any other way. It really helps to get the OP into the mindset of the people he's talking to and teaches him how to avoid saying what they don't to hear in a visceral way that's likely to be effective. It was the most important part of his answer, IMO.
– David Schwartz
Aug 8 '16 at 8:49
|
show 2 more comments
Henning Makholm's answer is excellent and covers pretty much everything. But being a Sri Lankan Software Engineer myself with Schengen visits on my passport, I can give you some tips to increase your odds:
Since your parents are basically supporting you, you will need to prove that they send you sufficient funds regularly. Your bank statements will prove that. In Sri Lankan banks, foreign remittances are properly marked as such, so you can prove that it is actually your parents who support you.
Your friend buying the tickets for you is somewhat a strange situation. A romantic partner buying and sponsoring the trip or your parents supporting you would be the norm.
The visa officers will consider how likely you are planning to return to the country. If you have previous visits to other countries, that can be a huge favor. From Sri Lanka, Thailand, Malaysia, India, and Singapore are some destinations that you can visit with none to least-hassle visa requirements. If your passport says you are a frequent traveler, you are giving a subtle hint that you like to travel, and not care to overstay or violate any laws.
You mentioned you are a university student. If it is a full time government university, and have had a reasonably good attendance and test outcomes, that can be a big proof of your ties to country.
If you have properties, they can help you as well (Real estate, vehicles, treasury bonds, etc). You will have to translate them to English (there are many authorized translators who do and costs about LKR 500 each).
Your previous visa applications are well logged and shared between consulates. Don't try to hide that fact.
Lastly, be outright open and honest. If you really intend to take a short trip, everything will line up well. Your university vacation dates, your trip dates, itinerary, budget expectations, etc. When you hand over the application, VFS (the agency that handles application processing) will take a thorough look. They are quite prompt (coming from first hand experience). If there is any document is missing, don't bite the bullet and submit anyway. Make sure to have every supporting document.
hey thanks for your advise Ayesh, well the thing is My friend owe me some money that is y he said he will pay for the airplane its not mandatory since i can pay myself to the trip(1300 euros in my account already).I am also sutyding to be a software engineer and my friend is currently working as a software engineer he get a good salary here(more than one lakh in Lkr). But my university is not government a one.i have been to Dubai previously not any other country.is it better to apply france again or nether land ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 6:30
Then probably it would be much better for you if your friend returns you the money and you pay for the ticket yourself
– Hanky Panky
Aug 8 '16 at 7:18
What about fund how much should we show in our account minimum.for 5 days and also when he pay back my account will be high again will that be a problem. last time i didn't show my parents dependencies and they put some extra money the day before i get the bank statement. Also i have paid for university for this semester can i show them too cuz no matter what i will back to my country to continue my studies(I studied four years this my last semester i have examination for finals on the end of October i will be graduate on next year January ).Plz give some suggestions. thanks
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 7:37
How much you need to show will depend on how long you plan to stay. In Amsterdam, I would say 50 Euro a day? Applying for the Netherlands after your France's application rejected can look a bit negative too. Regardless, you have to apply from the consulate of the country you plan to stay the most or the first entry.
– Ayesh K
Aug 8 '16 at 13:00
thanks Ayesh. the thing is If I am providing better documentations and more details rather than previous time. can i again apply visa from France embassy?.is it mandatory to submit documents through VFS. can i submit them directly to the embassy ?because VFS just check the checklist and they dont do any interview regarding the journey
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:29
|
show 1 more comment
You have asked many questions, let me answer each specifically. However, the overall conclusion is the same as Ayesh and Henning - you are a high risk applicant and are most likely to be rejected.
first one is can i show a hotel reservation from booking.com(free
cancellation,pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
Yes you can. I have used this many times (and for the Netherlands as well). The reservation should clearly state your name and the dates as well. You can print the email that booking.com sends you.
also I am currently undergraduate i will be graduate end of this year
after four years of studying.i can show university letters is that
will be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country ?.is
it required to have properties and deeds(my parents live in Dubai
still all the properties belong to them legally).
You also need a "no objection letter" from the university.
Generally speaking a university letter alone is not proof of ties. "Proof of ties" is another way of saying "things that will make sure you return back". A university admission letter falls short of that.
You mentioned your parents have property in Dubai. This is great for them, not so great for you. If you have permanent residency in Dubai, it might be better if you applied from Dubai.
They send my expenses every month. this time they send extra money for
the trip.Do i need to proof that i got money from my parent as a
gift(to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?.
As mentioned by Ayesh, your bank statements will work here, and you can explain (in the interview) that your parents are supporting you as you are a student. You may want to consider adding a letter from your parents (properly notarized) stating that they are willing to financially support your trip to Europe.
I currently have 1200 euros in bank account(1350 us dollar) will that
be enough? also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a
gift(he is travelling with me) do i need to provide a letter from him
too ?
There usually isn't a fixed amount that is "enough" - each country is different and depending on what you want to do in the country the amount can change.
Strictly as a guide you should have 50 EUR for each day you are staying as money available to you during your stay.
Regarding your friend paying for your ticket, you don't have to mention this specifically. You can just say that the ticket is pre-paid.
Thanks for your advises Burhan Khalid.well I dont have Permanent residency in Dubai bu i have traveled their with tourist visa. My parents only working there.Our properties are in Sri lanka. those things belong to My parents legally.Is it required to show deeds and properties? because I still dont have authority for properties the only thing i can show is my Bank account.would that be enough ?.Since parents are in Dubai they cant assign them to me legally right now .but i can ask them a letter,passport copies,visa copies and employment agreement.will that be enough ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:23
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You're going to have trouble.
The hotel reservation is not a problem -- if everything else checks out, all that is needed is that you have a concrete and realistic idea of where you're going to sleep and what it will cost.
It's the everything else that's a problem. What you don't mention here that you have a very recent visa refusal from France. And now you're suddenly going to the Netherlands instead. This is most certainly going to raise eyebrows -- it paints a picture of you and your friend "consulate-shopping" in the hope of finding a Schengen country, any Schengen country, that will let you in. And this again will make it look doubtful that your real intentions are just a short tourist trip.
Keep in mind that ultimately what the consular officer is looking for is not a rigid checklist of this or that documentation being present, but convincing evidence that you're not planning to immigrate illegally, overstay, and try to find work in Europe.
Most of what you write will easily support such a suspicion. Your friend (romantic partner? since he funds your airfare) is a software engineer, which is a skill sufficiently in demand that he might hope to find qualified work in Europe even illegally. You're supported by your parents, but they're not where you are (so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!), and you seem to have only quite weak ties to your home country. It would help if you can demonstrate that the undergraduate degree you're about to earn is an exclusive and prestigious one that will significantly increase your chances of a well-paid job in your home country; otherwise it may not be very convincing to a consular officer who has seen it all. (And apparently it didn't convince the French).
Also, being supported by your parents, you need to document their economy with income and bank statements, to make it seem realistic that they would choose to pay for your gallivanting around in Europe as a tourist (rather than considering the outlay an investment in you seeking a better life there).
All in all, it looks likely that you simply are not in a position in life now that will qualify you for a visa, no matter how much you document. Why not shoot for a different holiday destination with fewer barriers, and save Europe for when you're settled with stronger ties to your community?
1
While answer is good there is quite a bit of sarcasm in this reply. Hence my downvote. We can do away with statements like "so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!". It has no place on stack exchange.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 5:44
13
@NotAgain I don't find it particularly sarcastic. The parenthetical comment illustrates the kind of thinking one might expect from the official who is evaluating the visa application. These officials are required to view applications with high skepticism, under a presumption that the applicant intend to violate the terms of the visa by immigrating. An official who didn't draw the conclusion set out in this answer would likely not be doing his or her job properly.
– phoog
Aug 8 '16 at 5:49
What is rude remains rude. Does not matter if visa officer thinks like that. Anyways I have spoken what I felt after reading this reply. I might be a bit over sensitive or suffering Monday blues.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 6:11
7
@NotAgain - It specifically does matter if the visa officer thinks like that. Henning is attempted to show the decision making processes that the officer will go through, and how it will effect the decision making process.
– CMaster
Aug 8 '16 at 8:38
4
@phoog What you consider sarcastic, I consider vital information that could not be expressed better any other way. It really helps to get the OP into the mindset of the people he's talking to and teaches him how to avoid saying what they don't to hear in a visceral way that's likely to be effective. It was the most important part of his answer, IMO.
– David Schwartz
Aug 8 '16 at 8:49
|
show 2 more comments
You're going to have trouble.
The hotel reservation is not a problem -- if everything else checks out, all that is needed is that you have a concrete and realistic idea of where you're going to sleep and what it will cost.
It's the everything else that's a problem. What you don't mention here that you have a very recent visa refusal from France. And now you're suddenly going to the Netherlands instead. This is most certainly going to raise eyebrows -- it paints a picture of you and your friend "consulate-shopping" in the hope of finding a Schengen country, any Schengen country, that will let you in. And this again will make it look doubtful that your real intentions are just a short tourist trip.
Keep in mind that ultimately what the consular officer is looking for is not a rigid checklist of this or that documentation being present, but convincing evidence that you're not planning to immigrate illegally, overstay, and try to find work in Europe.
Most of what you write will easily support such a suspicion. Your friend (romantic partner? since he funds your airfare) is a software engineer, which is a skill sufficiently in demand that he might hope to find qualified work in Europe even illegally. You're supported by your parents, but they're not where you are (so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!), and you seem to have only quite weak ties to your home country. It would help if you can demonstrate that the undergraduate degree you're about to earn is an exclusive and prestigious one that will significantly increase your chances of a well-paid job in your home country; otherwise it may not be very convincing to a consular officer who has seen it all. (And apparently it didn't convince the French).
Also, being supported by your parents, you need to document their economy with income and bank statements, to make it seem realistic that they would choose to pay for your gallivanting around in Europe as a tourist (rather than considering the outlay an investment in you seeking a better life there).
All in all, it looks likely that you simply are not in a position in life now that will qualify you for a visa, no matter how much you document. Why not shoot for a different holiday destination with fewer barriers, and save Europe for when you're settled with stronger ties to your community?
1
While answer is good there is quite a bit of sarcasm in this reply. Hence my downvote. We can do away with statements like "so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!". It has no place on stack exchange.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 5:44
13
@NotAgain I don't find it particularly sarcastic. The parenthetical comment illustrates the kind of thinking one might expect from the official who is evaluating the visa application. These officials are required to view applications with high skepticism, under a presumption that the applicant intend to violate the terms of the visa by immigrating. An official who didn't draw the conclusion set out in this answer would likely not be doing his or her job properly.
– phoog
Aug 8 '16 at 5:49
What is rude remains rude. Does not matter if visa officer thinks like that. Anyways I have spoken what I felt after reading this reply. I might be a bit over sensitive or suffering Monday blues.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 6:11
7
@NotAgain - It specifically does matter if the visa officer thinks like that. Henning is attempted to show the decision making processes that the officer will go through, and how it will effect the decision making process.
– CMaster
Aug 8 '16 at 8:38
4
@phoog What you consider sarcastic, I consider vital information that could not be expressed better any other way. It really helps to get the OP into the mindset of the people he's talking to and teaches him how to avoid saying what they don't to hear in a visceral way that's likely to be effective. It was the most important part of his answer, IMO.
– David Schwartz
Aug 8 '16 at 8:49
|
show 2 more comments
You're going to have trouble.
The hotel reservation is not a problem -- if everything else checks out, all that is needed is that you have a concrete and realistic idea of where you're going to sleep and what it will cost.
It's the everything else that's a problem. What you don't mention here that you have a very recent visa refusal from France. And now you're suddenly going to the Netherlands instead. This is most certainly going to raise eyebrows -- it paints a picture of you and your friend "consulate-shopping" in the hope of finding a Schengen country, any Schengen country, that will let you in. And this again will make it look doubtful that your real intentions are just a short tourist trip.
Keep in mind that ultimately what the consular officer is looking for is not a rigid checklist of this or that documentation being present, but convincing evidence that you're not planning to immigrate illegally, overstay, and try to find work in Europe.
Most of what you write will easily support such a suspicion. Your friend (romantic partner? since he funds your airfare) is a software engineer, which is a skill sufficiently in demand that he might hope to find qualified work in Europe even illegally. You're supported by your parents, but they're not where you are (so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!), and you seem to have only quite weak ties to your home country. It would help if you can demonstrate that the undergraduate degree you're about to earn is an exclusive and prestigious one that will significantly increase your chances of a well-paid job in your home country; otherwise it may not be very convincing to a consular officer who has seen it all. (And apparently it didn't convince the French).
Also, being supported by your parents, you need to document their economy with income and bank statements, to make it seem realistic that they would choose to pay for your gallivanting around in Europe as a tourist (rather than considering the outlay an investment in you seeking a better life there).
All in all, it looks likely that you simply are not in a position in life now that will qualify you for a visa, no matter how much you document. Why not shoot for a different holiday destination with fewer barriers, and save Europe for when you're settled with stronger ties to your community?
You're going to have trouble.
The hotel reservation is not a problem -- if everything else checks out, all that is needed is that you have a concrete and realistic idea of where you're going to sleep and what it will cost.
It's the everything else that's a problem. What you don't mention here that you have a very recent visa refusal from France. And now you're suddenly going to the Netherlands instead. This is most certainly going to raise eyebrows -- it paints a picture of you and your friend "consulate-shopping" in the hope of finding a Schengen country, any Schengen country, that will let you in. And this again will make it look doubtful that your real intentions are just a short tourist trip.
Keep in mind that ultimately what the consular officer is looking for is not a rigid checklist of this or that documentation being present, but convincing evidence that you're not planning to immigrate illegally, overstay, and try to find work in Europe.
Most of what you write will easily support such a suspicion. Your friend (romantic partner? since he funds your airfare) is a software engineer, which is a skill sufficiently in demand that he might hope to find qualified work in Europe even illegally. You're supported by your parents, but they're not where you are (so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!), and you seem to have only quite weak ties to your home country. It would help if you can demonstrate that the undergraduate degree you're about to earn is an exclusive and prestigious one that will significantly increase your chances of a well-paid job in your home country; otherwise it may not be very convincing to a consular officer who has seen it all. (And apparently it didn't convince the French).
Also, being supported by your parents, you need to document their economy with income and bank statements, to make it seem realistic that they would choose to pay for your gallivanting around in Europe as a tourist (rather than considering the outlay an investment in you seeking a better life there).
All in all, it looks likely that you simply are not in a position in life now that will qualify you for a visa, no matter how much you document. Why not shoot for a different holiday destination with fewer barriers, and save Europe for when you're settled with stronger ties to your community?
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:52
Community♦
1
1
answered Aug 7 '16 at 20:39
Henning MakholmHenning Makholm
42.5k7104163
42.5k7104163
1
While answer is good there is quite a bit of sarcasm in this reply. Hence my downvote. We can do away with statements like "so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!". It has no place on stack exchange.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 5:44
13
@NotAgain I don't find it particularly sarcastic. The parenthetical comment illustrates the kind of thinking one might expect from the official who is evaluating the visa application. These officials are required to view applications with high skepticism, under a presumption that the applicant intend to violate the terms of the visa by immigrating. An official who didn't draw the conclusion set out in this answer would likely not be doing his or her job properly.
– phoog
Aug 8 '16 at 5:49
What is rude remains rude. Does not matter if visa officer thinks like that. Anyways I have spoken what I felt after reading this reply. I might be a bit over sensitive or suffering Monday blues.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 6:11
7
@NotAgain - It specifically does matter if the visa officer thinks like that. Henning is attempted to show the decision making processes that the officer will go through, and how it will effect the decision making process.
– CMaster
Aug 8 '16 at 8:38
4
@phoog What you consider sarcastic, I consider vital information that could not be expressed better any other way. It really helps to get the OP into the mindset of the people he's talking to and teaches him how to avoid saying what they don't to hear in a visceral way that's likely to be effective. It was the most important part of his answer, IMO.
– David Schwartz
Aug 8 '16 at 8:49
|
show 2 more comments
1
While answer is good there is quite a bit of sarcasm in this reply. Hence my downvote. We can do away with statements like "so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!". It has no place on stack exchange.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 5:44
13
@NotAgain I don't find it particularly sarcastic. The parenthetical comment illustrates the kind of thinking one might expect from the official who is evaluating the visa application. These officials are required to view applications with high skepticism, under a presumption that the applicant intend to violate the terms of the visa by immigrating. An official who didn't draw the conclusion set out in this answer would likely not be doing his or her job properly.
– phoog
Aug 8 '16 at 5:49
What is rude remains rude. Does not matter if visa officer thinks like that. Anyways I have spoken what I felt after reading this reply. I might be a bit over sensitive or suffering Monday blues.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 6:11
7
@NotAgain - It specifically does matter if the visa officer thinks like that. Henning is attempted to show the decision making processes that the officer will go through, and how it will effect the decision making process.
– CMaster
Aug 8 '16 at 8:38
4
@phoog What you consider sarcastic, I consider vital information that could not be expressed better any other way. It really helps to get the OP into the mindset of the people he's talking to and teaches him how to avoid saying what they don't to hear in a visceral way that's likely to be effective. It was the most important part of his answer, IMO.
– David Schwartz
Aug 8 '16 at 8:49
1
1
While answer is good there is quite a bit of sarcasm in this reply. Hence my downvote. We can do away with statements like "so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!". It has no place on stack exchange.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 5:44
While answer is good there is quite a bit of sarcasm in this reply. Hence my downvote. We can do away with statements like "so apparently you have a family tradition of going abroad for work, sending money home!". It has no place on stack exchange.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 5:44
13
13
@NotAgain I don't find it particularly sarcastic. The parenthetical comment illustrates the kind of thinking one might expect from the official who is evaluating the visa application. These officials are required to view applications with high skepticism, under a presumption that the applicant intend to violate the terms of the visa by immigrating. An official who didn't draw the conclusion set out in this answer would likely not be doing his or her job properly.
– phoog
Aug 8 '16 at 5:49
@NotAgain I don't find it particularly sarcastic. The parenthetical comment illustrates the kind of thinking one might expect from the official who is evaluating the visa application. These officials are required to view applications with high skepticism, under a presumption that the applicant intend to violate the terms of the visa by immigrating. An official who didn't draw the conclusion set out in this answer would likely not be doing his or her job properly.
– phoog
Aug 8 '16 at 5:49
What is rude remains rude. Does not matter if visa officer thinks like that. Anyways I have spoken what I felt after reading this reply. I might be a bit over sensitive or suffering Monday blues.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 6:11
What is rude remains rude. Does not matter if visa officer thinks like that. Anyways I have spoken what I felt after reading this reply. I might be a bit over sensitive or suffering Monday blues.
– NotAgain
Aug 8 '16 at 6:11
7
7
@NotAgain - It specifically does matter if the visa officer thinks like that. Henning is attempted to show the decision making processes that the officer will go through, and how it will effect the decision making process.
– CMaster
Aug 8 '16 at 8:38
@NotAgain - It specifically does matter if the visa officer thinks like that. Henning is attempted to show the decision making processes that the officer will go through, and how it will effect the decision making process.
– CMaster
Aug 8 '16 at 8:38
4
4
@phoog What you consider sarcastic, I consider vital information that could not be expressed better any other way. It really helps to get the OP into the mindset of the people he's talking to and teaches him how to avoid saying what they don't to hear in a visceral way that's likely to be effective. It was the most important part of his answer, IMO.
– David Schwartz
Aug 8 '16 at 8:49
@phoog What you consider sarcastic, I consider vital information that could not be expressed better any other way. It really helps to get the OP into the mindset of the people he's talking to and teaches him how to avoid saying what they don't to hear in a visceral way that's likely to be effective. It was the most important part of his answer, IMO.
– David Schwartz
Aug 8 '16 at 8:49
|
show 2 more comments
Henning Makholm's answer is excellent and covers pretty much everything. But being a Sri Lankan Software Engineer myself with Schengen visits on my passport, I can give you some tips to increase your odds:
Since your parents are basically supporting you, you will need to prove that they send you sufficient funds regularly. Your bank statements will prove that. In Sri Lankan banks, foreign remittances are properly marked as such, so you can prove that it is actually your parents who support you.
Your friend buying the tickets for you is somewhat a strange situation. A romantic partner buying and sponsoring the trip or your parents supporting you would be the norm.
The visa officers will consider how likely you are planning to return to the country. If you have previous visits to other countries, that can be a huge favor. From Sri Lanka, Thailand, Malaysia, India, and Singapore are some destinations that you can visit with none to least-hassle visa requirements. If your passport says you are a frequent traveler, you are giving a subtle hint that you like to travel, and not care to overstay or violate any laws.
You mentioned you are a university student. If it is a full time government university, and have had a reasonably good attendance and test outcomes, that can be a big proof of your ties to country.
If you have properties, they can help you as well (Real estate, vehicles, treasury bonds, etc). You will have to translate them to English (there are many authorized translators who do and costs about LKR 500 each).
Your previous visa applications are well logged and shared between consulates. Don't try to hide that fact.
Lastly, be outright open and honest. If you really intend to take a short trip, everything will line up well. Your university vacation dates, your trip dates, itinerary, budget expectations, etc. When you hand over the application, VFS (the agency that handles application processing) will take a thorough look. They are quite prompt (coming from first hand experience). If there is any document is missing, don't bite the bullet and submit anyway. Make sure to have every supporting document.
hey thanks for your advise Ayesh, well the thing is My friend owe me some money that is y he said he will pay for the airplane its not mandatory since i can pay myself to the trip(1300 euros in my account already).I am also sutyding to be a software engineer and my friend is currently working as a software engineer he get a good salary here(more than one lakh in Lkr). But my university is not government a one.i have been to Dubai previously not any other country.is it better to apply france again or nether land ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 6:30
Then probably it would be much better for you if your friend returns you the money and you pay for the ticket yourself
– Hanky Panky
Aug 8 '16 at 7:18
What about fund how much should we show in our account minimum.for 5 days and also when he pay back my account will be high again will that be a problem. last time i didn't show my parents dependencies and they put some extra money the day before i get the bank statement. Also i have paid for university for this semester can i show them too cuz no matter what i will back to my country to continue my studies(I studied four years this my last semester i have examination for finals on the end of October i will be graduate on next year January ).Plz give some suggestions. thanks
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 7:37
How much you need to show will depend on how long you plan to stay. In Amsterdam, I would say 50 Euro a day? Applying for the Netherlands after your France's application rejected can look a bit negative too. Regardless, you have to apply from the consulate of the country you plan to stay the most or the first entry.
– Ayesh K
Aug 8 '16 at 13:00
thanks Ayesh. the thing is If I am providing better documentations and more details rather than previous time. can i again apply visa from France embassy?.is it mandatory to submit documents through VFS. can i submit them directly to the embassy ?because VFS just check the checklist and they dont do any interview regarding the journey
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:29
|
show 1 more comment
Henning Makholm's answer is excellent and covers pretty much everything. But being a Sri Lankan Software Engineer myself with Schengen visits on my passport, I can give you some tips to increase your odds:
Since your parents are basically supporting you, you will need to prove that they send you sufficient funds regularly. Your bank statements will prove that. In Sri Lankan banks, foreign remittances are properly marked as such, so you can prove that it is actually your parents who support you.
Your friend buying the tickets for you is somewhat a strange situation. A romantic partner buying and sponsoring the trip or your parents supporting you would be the norm.
The visa officers will consider how likely you are planning to return to the country. If you have previous visits to other countries, that can be a huge favor. From Sri Lanka, Thailand, Malaysia, India, and Singapore are some destinations that you can visit with none to least-hassle visa requirements. If your passport says you are a frequent traveler, you are giving a subtle hint that you like to travel, and not care to overstay or violate any laws.
You mentioned you are a university student. If it is a full time government university, and have had a reasonably good attendance and test outcomes, that can be a big proof of your ties to country.
If you have properties, they can help you as well (Real estate, vehicles, treasury bonds, etc). You will have to translate them to English (there are many authorized translators who do and costs about LKR 500 each).
Your previous visa applications are well logged and shared between consulates. Don't try to hide that fact.
Lastly, be outright open and honest. If you really intend to take a short trip, everything will line up well. Your university vacation dates, your trip dates, itinerary, budget expectations, etc. When you hand over the application, VFS (the agency that handles application processing) will take a thorough look. They are quite prompt (coming from first hand experience). If there is any document is missing, don't bite the bullet and submit anyway. Make sure to have every supporting document.
hey thanks for your advise Ayesh, well the thing is My friend owe me some money that is y he said he will pay for the airplane its not mandatory since i can pay myself to the trip(1300 euros in my account already).I am also sutyding to be a software engineer and my friend is currently working as a software engineer he get a good salary here(more than one lakh in Lkr). But my university is not government a one.i have been to Dubai previously not any other country.is it better to apply france again or nether land ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 6:30
Then probably it would be much better for you if your friend returns you the money and you pay for the ticket yourself
– Hanky Panky
Aug 8 '16 at 7:18
What about fund how much should we show in our account minimum.for 5 days and also when he pay back my account will be high again will that be a problem. last time i didn't show my parents dependencies and they put some extra money the day before i get the bank statement. Also i have paid for university for this semester can i show them too cuz no matter what i will back to my country to continue my studies(I studied four years this my last semester i have examination for finals on the end of October i will be graduate on next year January ).Plz give some suggestions. thanks
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 7:37
How much you need to show will depend on how long you plan to stay. In Amsterdam, I would say 50 Euro a day? Applying for the Netherlands after your France's application rejected can look a bit negative too. Regardless, you have to apply from the consulate of the country you plan to stay the most or the first entry.
– Ayesh K
Aug 8 '16 at 13:00
thanks Ayesh. the thing is If I am providing better documentations and more details rather than previous time. can i again apply visa from France embassy?.is it mandatory to submit documents through VFS. can i submit them directly to the embassy ?because VFS just check the checklist and they dont do any interview regarding the journey
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:29
|
show 1 more comment
Henning Makholm's answer is excellent and covers pretty much everything. But being a Sri Lankan Software Engineer myself with Schengen visits on my passport, I can give you some tips to increase your odds:
Since your parents are basically supporting you, you will need to prove that they send you sufficient funds regularly. Your bank statements will prove that. In Sri Lankan banks, foreign remittances are properly marked as such, so you can prove that it is actually your parents who support you.
Your friend buying the tickets for you is somewhat a strange situation. A romantic partner buying and sponsoring the trip or your parents supporting you would be the norm.
The visa officers will consider how likely you are planning to return to the country. If you have previous visits to other countries, that can be a huge favor. From Sri Lanka, Thailand, Malaysia, India, and Singapore are some destinations that you can visit with none to least-hassle visa requirements. If your passport says you are a frequent traveler, you are giving a subtle hint that you like to travel, and not care to overstay or violate any laws.
You mentioned you are a university student. If it is a full time government university, and have had a reasonably good attendance and test outcomes, that can be a big proof of your ties to country.
If you have properties, they can help you as well (Real estate, vehicles, treasury bonds, etc). You will have to translate them to English (there are many authorized translators who do and costs about LKR 500 each).
Your previous visa applications are well logged and shared between consulates. Don't try to hide that fact.
Lastly, be outright open and honest. If you really intend to take a short trip, everything will line up well. Your university vacation dates, your trip dates, itinerary, budget expectations, etc. When you hand over the application, VFS (the agency that handles application processing) will take a thorough look. They are quite prompt (coming from first hand experience). If there is any document is missing, don't bite the bullet and submit anyway. Make sure to have every supporting document.
Henning Makholm's answer is excellent and covers pretty much everything. But being a Sri Lankan Software Engineer myself with Schengen visits on my passport, I can give you some tips to increase your odds:
Since your parents are basically supporting you, you will need to prove that they send you sufficient funds regularly. Your bank statements will prove that. In Sri Lankan banks, foreign remittances are properly marked as such, so you can prove that it is actually your parents who support you.
Your friend buying the tickets for you is somewhat a strange situation. A romantic partner buying and sponsoring the trip or your parents supporting you would be the norm.
The visa officers will consider how likely you are planning to return to the country. If you have previous visits to other countries, that can be a huge favor. From Sri Lanka, Thailand, Malaysia, India, and Singapore are some destinations that you can visit with none to least-hassle visa requirements. If your passport says you are a frequent traveler, you are giving a subtle hint that you like to travel, and not care to overstay or violate any laws.
You mentioned you are a university student. If it is a full time government university, and have had a reasonably good attendance and test outcomes, that can be a big proof of your ties to country.
If you have properties, they can help you as well (Real estate, vehicles, treasury bonds, etc). You will have to translate them to English (there are many authorized translators who do and costs about LKR 500 each).
Your previous visa applications are well logged and shared between consulates. Don't try to hide that fact.
Lastly, be outright open and honest. If you really intend to take a short trip, everything will line up well. Your university vacation dates, your trip dates, itinerary, budget expectations, etc. When you hand over the application, VFS (the agency that handles application processing) will take a thorough look. They are quite prompt (coming from first hand experience). If there is any document is missing, don't bite the bullet and submit anyway. Make sure to have every supporting document.
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:52
Community♦
1
1
answered Aug 8 '16 at 5:04
Ayesh KAyesh K
4,59832344
4,59832344
hey thanks for your advise Ayesh, well the thing is My friend owe me some money that is y he said he will pay for the airplane its not mandatory since i can pay myself to the trip(1300 euros in my account already).I am also sutyding to be a software engineer and my friend is currently working as a software engineer he get a good salary here(more than one lakh in Lkr). But my university is not government a one.i have been to Dubai previously not any other country.is it better to apply france again or nether land ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 6:30
Then probably it would be much better for you if your friend returns you the money and you pay for the ticket yourself
– Hanky Panky
Aug 8 '16 at 7:18
What about fund how much should we show in our account minimum.for 5 days and also when he pay back my account will be high again will that be a problem. last time i didn't show my parents dependencies and they put some extra money the day before i get the bank statement. Also i have paid for university for this semester can i show them too cuz no matter what i will back to my country to continue my studies(I studied four years this my last semester i have examination for finals on the end of October i will be graduate on next year January ).Plz give some suggestions. thanks
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 7:37
How much you need to show will depend on how long you plan to stay. In Amsterdam, I would say 50 Euro a day? Applying for the Netherlands after your France's application rejected can look a bit negative too. Regardless, you have to apply from the consulate of the country you plan to stay the most or the first entry.
– Ayesh K
Aug 8 '16 at 13:00
thanks Ayesh. the thing is If I am providing better documentations and more details rather than previous time. can i again apply visa from France embassy?.is it mandatory to submit documents through VFS. can i submit them directly to the embassy ?because VFS just check the checklist and they dont do any interview regarding the journey
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:29
|
show 1 more comment
hey thanks for your advise Ayesh, well the thing is My friend owe me some money that is y he said he will pay for the airplane its not mandatory since i can pay myself to the trip(1300 euros in my account already).I am also sutyding to be a software engineer and my friend is currently working as a software engineer he get a good salary here(more than one lakh in Lkr). But my university is not government a one.i have been to Dubai previously not any other country.is it better to apply france again or nether land ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 6:30
Then probably it would be much better for you if your friend returns you the money and you pay for the ticket yourself
– Hanky Panky
Aug 8 '16 at 7:18
What about fund how much should we show in our account minimum.for 5 days and also when he pay back my account will be high again will that be a problem. last time i didn't show my parents dependencies and they put some extra money the day before i get the bank statement. Also i have paid for university for this semester can i show them too cuz no matter what i will back to my country to continue my studies(I studied four years this my last semester i have examination for finals on the end of October i will be graduate on next year January ).Plz give some suggestions. thanks
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 7:37
How much you need to show will depend on how long you plan to stay. In Amsterdam, I would say 50 Euro a day? Applying for the Netherlands after your France's application rejected can look a bit negative too. Regardless, you have to apply from the consulate of the country you plan to stay the most or the first entry.
– Ayesh K
Aug 8 '16 at 13:00
thanks Ayesh. the thing is If I am providing better documentations and more details rather than previous time. can i again apply visa from France embassy?.is it mandatory to submit documents through VFS. can i submit them directly to the embassy ?because VFS just check the checklist and they dont do any interview regarding the journey
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:29
hey thanks for your advise Ayesh, well the thing is My friend owe me some money that is y he said he will pay for the airplane its not mandatory since i can pay myself to the trip(1300 euros in my account already).I am also sutyding to be a software engineer and my friend is currently working as a software engineer he get a good salary here(more than one lakh in Lkr). But my university is not government a one.i have been to Dubai previously not any other country.is it better to apply france again or nether land ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 6:30
hey thanks for your advise Ayesh, well the thing is My friend owe me some money that is y he said he will pay for the airplane its not mandatory since i can pay myself to the trip(1300 euros in my account already).I am also sutyding to be a software engineer and my friend is currently working as a software engineer he get a good salary here(more than one lakh in Lkr). But my university is not government a one.i have been to Dubai previously not any other country.is it better to apply france again or nether land ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 6:30
Then probably it would be much better for you if your friend returns you the money and you pay for the ticket yourself
– Hanky Panky
Aug 8 '16 at 7:18
Then probably it would be much better for you if your friend returns you the money and you pay for the ticket yourself
– Hanky Panky
Aug 8 '16 at 7:18
What about fund how much should we show in our account minimum.for 5 days and also when he pay back my account will be high again will that be a problem. last time i didn't show my parents dependencies and they put some extra money the day before i get the bank statement. Also i have paid for university for this semester can i show them too cuz no matter what i will back to my country to continue my studies(I studied four years this my last semester i have examination for finals on the end of October i will be graduate on next year January ).Plz give some suggestions. thanks
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 7:37
What about fund how much should we show in our account minimum.for 5 days and also when he pay back my account will be high again will that be a problem. last time i didn't show my parents dependencies and they put some extra money the day before i get the bank statement. Also i have paid for university for this semester can i show them too cuz no matter what i will back to my country to continue my studies(I studied four years this my last semester i have examination for finals on the end of October i will be graduate on next year January ).Plz give some suggestions. thanks
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 7:37
How much you need to show will depend on how long you plan to stay. In Amsterdam, I would say 50 Euro a day? Applying for the Netherlands after your France's application rejected can look a bit negative too. Regardless, you have to apply from the consulate of the country you plan to stay the most or the first entry.
– Ayesh K
Aug 8 '16 at 13:00
How much you need to show will depend on how long you plan to stay. In Amsterdam, I would say 50 Euro a day? Applying for the Netherlands after your France's application rejected can look a bit negative too. Regardless, you have to apply from the consulate of the country you plan to stay the most or the first entry.
– Ayesh K
Aug 8 '16 at 13:00
thanks Ayesh. the thing is If I am providing better documentations and more details rather than previous time. can i again apply visa from France embassy?.is it mandatory to submit documents through VFS. can i submit them directly to the embassy ?because VFS just check the checklist and they dont do any interview regarding the journey
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:29
thanks Ayesh. the thing is If I am providing better documentations and more details rather than previous time. can i again apply visa from France embassy?.is it mandatory to submit documents through VFS. can i submit them directly to the embassy ?because VFS just check the checklist and they dont do any interview regarding the journey
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:29
|
show 1 more comment
You have asked many questions, let me answer each specifically. However, the overall conclusion is the same as Ayesh and Henning - you are a high risk applicant and are most likely to be rejected.
first one is can i show a hotel reservation from booking.com(free
cancellation,pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
Yes you can. I have used this many times (and for the Netherlands as well). The reservation should clearly state your name and the dates as well. You can print the email that booking.com sends you.
also I am currently undergraduate i will be graduate end of this year
after four years of studying.i can show university letters is that
will be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country ?.is
it required to have properties and deeds(my parents live in Dubai
still all the properties belong to them legally).
You also need a "no objection letter" from the university.
Generally speaking a university letter alone is not proof of ties. "Proof of ties" is another way of saying "things that will make sure you return back". A university admission letter falls short of that.
You mentioned your parents have property in Dubai. This is great for them, not so great for you. If you have permanent residency in Dubai, it might be better if you applied from Dubai.
They send my expenses every month. this time they send extra money for
the trip.Do i need to proof that i got money from my parent as a
gift(to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?.
As mentioned by Ayesh, your bank statements will work here, and you can explain (in the interview) that your parents are supporting you as you are a student. You may want to consider adding a letter from your parents (properly notarized) stating that they are willing to financially support your trip to Europe.
I currently have 1200 euros in bank account(1350 us dollar) will that
be enough? also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a
gift(he is travelling with me) do i need to provide a letter from him
too ?
There usually isn't a fixed amount that is "enough" - each country is different and depending on what you want to do in the country the amount can change.
Strictly as a guide you should have 50 EUR for each day you are staying as money available to you during your stay.
Regarding your friend paying for your ticket, you don't have to mention this specifically. You can just say that the ticket is pre-paid.
Thanks for your advises Burhan Khalid.well I dont have Permanent residency in Dubai bu i have traveled their with tourist visa. My parents only working there.Our properties are in Sri lanka. those things belong to My parents legally.Is it required to show deeds and properties? because I still dont have authority for properties the only thing i can show is my Bank account.would that be enough ?.Since parents are in Dubai they cant assign them to me legally right now .but i can ask them a letter,passport copies,visa copies and employment agreement.will that be enough ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:23
add a comment |
You have asked many questions, let me answer each specifically. However, the overall conclusion is the same as Ayesh and Henning - you are a high risk applicant and are most likely to be rejected.
first one is can i show a hotel reservation from booking.com(free
cancellation,pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
Yes you can. I have used this many times (and for the Netherlands as well). The reservation should clearly state your name and the dates as well. You can print the email that booking.com sends you.
also I am currently undergraduate i will be graduate end of this year
after four years of studying.i can show university letters is that
will be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country ?.is
it required to have properties and deeds(my parents live in Dubai
still all the properties belong to them legally).
You also need a "no objection letter" from the university.
Generally speaking a university letter alone is not proof of ties. "Proof of ties" is another way of saying "things that will make sure you return back". A university admission letter falls short of that.
You mentioned your parents have property in Dubai. This is great for them, not so great for you. If you have permanent residency in Dubai, it might be better if you applied from Dubai.
They send my expenses every month. this time they send extra money for
the trip.Do i need to proof that i got money from my parent as a
gift(to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?.
As mentioned by Ayesh, your bank statements will work here, and you can explain (in the interview) that your parents are supporting you as you are a student. You may want to consider adding a letter from your parents (properly notarized) stating that they are willing to financially support your trip to Europe.
I currently have 1200 euros in bank account(1350 us dollar) will that
be enough? also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a
gift(he is travelling with me) do i need to provide a letter from him
too ?
There usually isn't a fixed amount that is "enough" - each country is different and depending on what you want to do in the country the amount can change.
Strictly as a guide you should have 50 EUR for each day you are staying as money available to you during your stay.
Regarding your friend paying for your ticket, you don't have to mention this specifically. You can just say that the ticket is pre-paid.
Thanks for your advises Burhan Khalid.well I dont have Permanent residency in Dubai bu i have traveled their with tourist visa. My parents only working there.Our properties are in Sri lanka. those things belong to My parents legally.Is it required to show deeds and properties? because I still dont have authority for properties the only thing i can show is my Bank account.would that be enough ?.Since parents are in Dubai they cant assign them to me legally right now .but i can ask them a letter,passport copies,visa copies and employment agreement.will that be enough ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:23
add a comment |
You have asked many questions, let me answer each specifically. However, the overall conclusion is the same as Ayesh and Henning - you are a high risk applicant and are most likely to be rejected.
first one is can i show a hotel reservation from booking.com(free
cancellation,pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
Yes you can. I have used this many times (and for the Netherlands as well). The reservation should clearly state your name and the dates as well. You can print the email that booking.com sends you.
also I am currently undergraduate i will be graduate end of this year
after four years of studying.i can show university letters is that
will be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country ?.is
it required to have properties and deeds(my parents live in Dubai
still all the properties belong to them legally).
You also need a "no objection letter" from the university.
Generally speaking a university letter alone is not proof of ties. "Proof of ties" is another way of saying "things that will make sure you return back". A university admission letter falls short of that.
You mentioned your parents have property in Dubai. This is great for them, not so great for you. If you have permanent residency in Dubai, it might be better if you applied from Dubai.
They send my expenses every month. this time they send extra money for
the trip.Do i need to proof that i got money from my parent as a
gift(to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?.
As mentioned by Ayesh, your bank statements will work here, and you can explain (in the interview) that your parents are supporting you as you are a student. You may want to consider adding a letter from your parents (properly notarized) stating that they are willing to financially support your trip to Europe.
I currently have 1200 euros in bank account(1350 us dollar) will that
be enough? also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a
gift(he is travelling with me) do i need to provide a letter from him
too ?
There usually isn't a fixed amount that is "enough" - each country is different and depending on what you want to do in the country the amount can change.
Strictly as a guide you should have 50 EUR for each day you are staying as money available to you during your stay.
Regarding your friend paying for your ticket, you don't have to mention this specifically. You can just say that the ticket is pre-paid.
You have asked many questions, let me answer each specifically. However, the overall conclusion is the same as Ayesh and Henning - you are a high risk applicant and are most likely to be rejected.
first one is can i show a hotel reservation from booking.com(free
cancellation,pay at hotel) as my accommodation?
Yes you can. I have used this many times (and for the Netherlands as well). The reservation should clearly state your name and the dates as well. You can print the email that booking.com sends you.
also I am currently undergraduate i will be graduate end of this year
after four years of studying.i can show university letters is that
will be enough as a valid reason to come back to my home country ?.is
it required to have properties and deeds(my parents live in Dubai
still all the properties belong to them legally).
You also need a "no objection letter" from the university.
Generally speaking a university letter alone is not proof of ties. "Proof of ties" is another way of saying "things that will make sure you return back". A university admission letter falls short of that.
You mentioned your parents have property in Dubai. This is great for them, not so great for you. If you have permanent residency in Dubai, it might be better if you applied from Dubai.
They send my expenses every month. this time they send extra money for
the trip.Do i need to proof that i got money from my parent as a
gift(to prevent illegal mean as a refusal point)?.
As mentioned by Ayesh, your bank statements will work here, and you can explain (in the interview) that your parents are supporting you as you are a student. You may want to consider adding a letter from your parents (properly notarized) stating that they are willing to financially support your trip to Europe.
I currently have 1200 euros in bank account(1350 us dollar) will that
be enough? also my friend is paying money for the air ticket as a
gift(he is travelling with me) do i need to provide a letter from him
too ?
There usually isn't a fixed amount that is "enough" - each country is different and depending on what you want to do in the country the amount can change.
Strictly as a guide you should have 50 EUR for each day you are staying as money available to you during your stay.
Regarding your friend paying for your ticket, you don't have to mention this specifically. You can just say that the ticket is pre-paid.
answered Aug 8 '16 at 9:44
Burhan KhalidBurhan Khalid
36.6k372147
36.6k372147
Thanks for your advises Burhan Khalid.well I dont have Permanent residency in Dubai bu i have traveled their with tourist visa. My parents only working there.Our properties are in Sri lanka. those things belong to My parents legally.Is it required to show deeds and properties? because I still dont have authority for properties the only thing i can show is my Bank account.would that be enough ?.Since parents are in Dubai they cant assign them to me legally right now .but i can ask them a letter,passport copies,visa copies and employment agreement.will that be enough ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:23
add a comment |
Thanks for your advises Burhan Khalid.well I dont have Permanent residency in Dubai bu i have traveled their with tourist visa. My parents only working there.Our properties are in Sri lanka. those things belong to My parents legally.Is it required to show deeds and properties? because I still dont have authority for properties the only thing i can show is my Bank account.would that be enough ?.Since parents are in Dubai they cant assign them to me legally right now .but i can ask them a letter,passport copies,visa copies and employment agreement.will that be enough ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:23
Thanks for your advises Burhan Khalid.well I dont have Permanent residency in Dubai bu i have traveled their with tourist visa. My parents only working there.Our properties are in Sri lanka. those things belong to My parents legally.Is it required to show deeds and properties? because I still dont have authority for properties the only thing i can show is my Bank account.would that be enough ?.Since parents are in Dubai they cant assign them to me legally right now .but i can ask them a letter,passport copies,visa copies and employment agreement.will that be enough ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:23
Thanks for your advises Burhan Khalid.well I dont have Permanent residency in Dubai bu i have traveled their with tourist visa. My parents only working there.Our properties are in Sri lanka. those things belong to My parents legally.Is it required to show deeds and properties? because I still dont have authority for properties the only thing i can show is my Bank account.would that be enough ?.Since parents are in Dubai they cant assign them to me legally right now .but i can ask them a letter,passport copies,visa copies and employment agreement.will that be enough ?
– Dinuk
Aug 8 '16 at 14:23
add a comment |
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+1 for the question, but per the answer below your circumstances and lifestyle are problematic. Please read stackoverflow.com/help/someone-answers vis-a-vis the answer below, thanks
– Gayot Fow
Aug 7 '16 at 23:43
As for the money: Calculate around 30 Euros for food (fast food/ supermarket) or around 60 (restaurant) per day and person, 10 per day for public transport (inside a city, more for inter-city trips), 15 for a single museum entrance, something for souvenirs.,... Plus you should have enough money left when you come back home.
– TheEspinosa
Aug 8 '16 at 9:24