US citizen previously refused entry into the UK and been refused for visa. What to do now?












15














I'm so highly confused but maybe you guys can help me.
My girlfriend lives in Bristol, United Kingdom, shes a British Citizen while I'm American. I'm not very good at explaining myself so beware but I'm desperate and out of options here.



I travel to see her for the first time Jan. 2017, I went to Gatwick London and the border officers there let me through with flying colors. I travel again to see her April 2017 now here are the details you need to know before going further:




  • I quit my job that same month.

  • I bought a round trip ticket to stay there for about 3 months. I did know there was a limit with just a passport. I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay.

  • I really didn't have enough funds that was require for me to stay for 3 months.


When I got to the border officer they grilled me so bad it trigger my anxiety and I just knew they wasn't going to let me through because the amount of questions they were asking me...



After hours of waiting, they finally made a decision of not allowing me to enter. They said they couldn't allow me to enter because I didn't have a visa and low on funds.
Devastated, they allowed me to stay with my lover for 72 hours for it was time for me to go back to America.



Once again, not giving up I attempt to see her again but was stop at Ireland (my layover flight was there). No knowledge of knowing they check passports for England I got stop and grilled again, they asked me why I was refused entry in the UK, I told them the truth and let me add - I was prepared for this trip, I shorten my stay for two weeks and had enough money to last for my stay.



They told me I can't enter their country for my flight because I need to go straight to UK or have a visa to enter.



So, after getting deported and coming back to America once again, I decided to apply for a visa. I had all the supporting documents and they still refuse me.



They explain they refuse my visa because they felt like I'm trying to stay in their country "illegally" how can they make such a judgement when I was once there in Jan. 2016 and left the UK within two weeks.



So now I'm here, running out of options - I have no idea what to do next. Do anybody have any clue what I should do???



Here's pictures of the stamps on my passport:
enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 17




    "I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay": you didn't need a visa. As a US citizen, you can visit the UK for up to six months. No visa is necessary.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:11






  • 14




    I suppose the Irish officer was unable to admit you without a visa because of your plan to go to the UK along with your prior refusal of entry. The UK officer probably told you something that you misunderstood. US citizens do need visas for some purposes of travel, so if they decide that you're not a "genuine visitor" they might want a visa for the purpose they think you're pursuing. If you look at the stamp from your first visit you should see that you were given "leave to enter for six months," and you didn't have a visa then.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:22






  • 7




    I think for now the visiting must be the other way around i.e. your girlfriend/lover can be coming over to the USA instead. You seem to be taking the whole episode very lightly, which is both a good and a bad thing.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    Dec 6 at 21:15








  • 7




    @phoog I am 99% confident it was a refusal based on 4.2 (a) and (c), for which we have a fantastic overview question.
    – JonathanReez
    Dec 6 at 22:56






  • 10




    As soon as I saw "I quit my job that same month", I knew why you'd have trouble: they thought you wanted to stay in Britain with your girlfriend.
    – RonJohn
    Dec 7 at 9:31
















15














I'm so highly confused but maybe you guys can help me.
My girlfriend lives in Bristol, United Kingdom, shes a British Citizen while I'm American. I'm not very good at explaining myself so beware but I'm desperate and out of options here.



I travel to see her for the first time Jan. 2017, I went to Gatwick London and the border officers there let me through with flying colors. I travel again to see her April 2017 now here are the details you need to know before going further:




  • I quit my job that same month.

  • I bought a round trip ticket to stay there for about 3 months. I did know there was a limit with just a passport. I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay.

  • I really didn't have enough funds that was require for me to stay for 3 months.


When I got to the border officer they grilled me so bad it trigger my anxiety and I just knew they wasn't going to let me through because the amount of questions they were asking me...



After hours of waiting, they finally made a decision of not allowing me to enter. They said they couldn't allow me to enter because I didn't have a visa and low on funds.
Devastated, they allowed me to stay with my lover for 72 hours for it was time for me to go back to America.



Once again, not giving up I attempt to see her again but was stop at Ireland (my layover flight was there). No knowledge of knowing they check passports for England I got stop and grilled again, they asked me why I was refused entry in the UK, I told them the truth and let me add - I was prepared for this trip, I shorten my stay for two weeks and had enough money to last for my stay.



They told me I can't enter their country for my flight because I need to go straight to UK or have a visa to enter.



So, after getting deported and coming back to America once again, I decided to apply for a visa. I had all the supporting documents and they still refuse me.



They explain they refuse my visa because they felt like I'm trying to stay in their country "illegally" how can they make such a judgement when I was once there in Jan. 2016 and left the UK within two weeks.



So now I'm here, running out of options - I have no idea what to do next. Do anybody have any clue what I should do???



Here's pictures of the stamps on my passport:
enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question




















  • 17




    "I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay": you didn't need a visa. As a US citizen, you can visit the UK for up to six months. No visa is necessary.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:11






  • 14




    I suppose the Irish officer was unable to admit you without a visa because of your plan to go to the UK along with your prior refusal of entry. The UK officer probably told you something that you misunderstood. US citizens do need visas for some purposes of travel, so if they decide that you're not a "genuine visitor" they might want a visa for the purpose they think you're pursuing. If you look at the stamp from your first visit you should see that you were given "leave to enter for six months," and you didn't have a visa then.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:22






  • 7




    I think for now the visiting must be the other way around i.e. your girlfriend/lover can be coming over to the USA instead. You seem to be taking the whole episode very lightly, which is both a good and a bad thing.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    Dec 6 at 21:15








  • 7




    @phoog I am 99% confident it was a refusal based on 4.2 (a) and (c), for which we have a fantastic overview question.
    – JonathanReez
    Dec 6 at 22:56






  • 10




    As soon as I saw "I quit my job that same month", I knew why you'd have trouble: they thought you wanted to stay in Britain with your girlfriend.
    – RonJohn
    Dec 7 at 9:31














15












15








15







I'm so highly confused but maybe you guys can help me.
My girlfriend lives in Bristol, United Kingdom, shes a British Citizen while I'm American. I'm not very good at explaining myself so beware but I'm desperate and out of options here.



I travel to see her for the first time Jan. 2017, I went to Gatwick London and the border officers there let me through with flying colors. I travel again to see her April 2017 now here are the details you need to know before going further:




  • I quit my job that same month.

  • I bought a round trip ticket to stay there for about 3 months. I did know there was a limit with just a passport. I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay.

  • I really didn't have enough funds that was require for me to stay for 3 months.


When I got to the border officer they grilled me so bad it trigger my anxiety and I just knew they wasn't going to let me through because the amount of questions they were asking me...



After hours of waiting, they finally made a decision of not allowing me to enter. They said they couldn't allow me to enter because I didn't have a visa and low on funds.
Devastated, they allowed me to stay with my lover for 72 hours for it was time for me to go back to America.



Once again, not giving up I attempt to see her again but was stop at Ireland (my layover flight was there). No knowledge of knowing they check passports for England I got stop and grilled again, they asked me why I was refused entry in the UK, I told them the truth and let me add - I was prepared for this trip, I shorten my stay for two weeks and had enough money to last for my stay.



They told me I can't enter their country for my flight because I need to go straight to UK or have a visa to enter.



So, after getting deported and coming back to America once again, I decided to apply for a visa. I had all the supporting documents and they still refuse me.



They explain they refuse my visa because they felt like I'm trying to stay in their country "illegally" how can they make such a judgement when I was once there in Jan. 2016 and left the UK within two weeks.



So now I'm here, running out of options - I have no idea what to do next. Do anybody have any clue what I should do???



Here's pictures of the stamps on my passport:
enter image description here



enter image description here










share|improve this question















I'm so highly confused but maybe you guys can help me.
My girlfriend lives in Bristol, United Kingdom, shes a British Citizen while I'm American. I'm not very good at explaining myself so beware but I'm desperate and out of options here.



I travel to see her for the first time Jan. 2017, I went to Gatwick London and the border officers there let me through with flying colors. I travel again to see her April 2017 now here are the details you need to know before going further:




  • I quit my job that same month.

  • I bought a round trip ticket to stay there for about 3 months. I did know there was a limit with just a passport. I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay.

  • I really didn't have enough funds that was require for me to stay for 3 months.


When I got to the border officer they grilled me so bad it trigger my anxiety and I just knew they wasn't going to let me through because the amount of questions they were asking me...



After hours of waiting, they finally made a decision of not allowing me to enter. They said they couldn't allow me to enter because I didn't have a visa and low on funds.
Devastated, they allowed me to stay with my lover for 72 hours for it was time for me to go back to America.



Once again, not giving up I attempt to see her again but was stop at Ireland (my layover flight was there). No knowledge of knowing they check passports for England I got stop and grilled again, they asked me why I was refused entry in the UK, I told them the truth and let me add - I was prepared for this trip, I shorten my stay for two weeks and had enough money to last for my stay.



They told me I can't enter their country for my flight because I need to go straight to UK or have a visa to enter.



So, after getting deported and coming back to America once again, I decided to apply for a visa. I had all the supporting documents and they still refuse me.



They explain they refuse my visa because they felt like I'm trying to stay in their country "illegally" how can they make such a judgement when I was once there in Jan. 2016 and left the UK within two weeks.



So now I'm here, running out of options - I have no idea what to do next. Do anybody have any clue what I should do???



Here's pictures of the stamps on my passport:
enter image description here



enter image description here







visas customs-and-immigration borders






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 6 at 21:59









brhans

3,99311227




3,99311227










asked Dec 6 at 18:51









Genger Janee

8215




8215








  • 17




    "I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay": you didn't need a visa. As a US citizen, you can visit the UK for up to six months. No visa is necessary.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:11






  • 14




    I suppose the Irish officer was unable to admit you without a visa because of your plan to go to the UK along with your prior refusal of entry. The UK officer probably told you something that you misunderstood. US citizens do need visas for some purposes of travel, so if they decide that you're not a "genuine visitor" they might want a visa for the purpose they think you're pursuing. If you look at the stamp from your first visit you should see that you were given "leave to enter for six months," and you didn't have a visa then.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:22






  • 7




    I think for now the visiting must be the other way around i.e. your girlfriend/lover can be coming over to the USA instead. You seem to be taking the whole episode very lightly, which is both a good and a bad thing.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    Dec 6 at 21:15








  • 7




    @phoog I am 99% confident it was a refusal based on 4.2 (a) and (c), for which we have a fantastic overview question.
    – JonathanReez
    Dec 6 at 22:56






  • 10




    As soon as I saw "I quit my job that same month", I knew why you'd have trouble: they thought you wanted to stay in Britain with your girlfriend.
    – RonJohn
    Dec 7 at 9:31














  • 17




    "I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay": you didn't need a visa. As a US citizen, you can visit the UK for up to six months. No visa is necessary.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:11






  • 14




    I suppose the Irish officer was unable to admit you without a visa because of your plan to go to the UK along with your prior refusal of entry. The UK officer probably told you something that you misunderstood. US citizens do need visas for some purposes of travel, so if they decide that you're not a "genuine visitor" they might want a visa for the purpose they think you're pursuing. If you look at the stamp from your first visit you should see that you were given "leave to enter for six months," and you didn't have a visa then.
    – phoog
    Dec 6 at 19:22






  • 7




    I think for now the visiting must be the other way around i.e. your girlfriend/lover can be coming over to the USA instead. You seem to be taking the whole episode very lightly, which is both a good and a bad thing.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    Dec 6 at 21:15








  • 7




    @phoog I am 99% confident it was a refusal based on 4.2 (a) and (c), for which we have a fantastic overview question.
    – JonathanReez
    Dec 6 at 22:56






  • 10




    As soon as I saw "I quit my job that same month", I knew why you'd have trouble: they thought you wanted to stay in Britain with your girlfriend.
    – RonJohn
    Dec 7 at 9:31








17




17




"I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay": you didn't need a visa. As a US citizen, you can visit the UK for up to six months. No visa is necessary.
– phoog
Dec 6 at 19:11




"I didn't know I need a visa for the time I was trying to stay": you didn't need a visa. As a US citizen, you can visit the UK for up to six months. No visa is necessary.
– phoog
Dec 6 at 19:11




14




14




I suppose the Irish officer was unable to admit you without a visa because of your plan to go to the UK along with your prior refusal of entry. The UK officer probably told you something that you misunderstood. US citizens do need visas for some purposes of travel, so if they decide that you're not a "genuine visitor" they might want a visa for the purpose they think you're pursuing. If you look at the stamp from your first visit you should see that you were given "leave to enter for six months," and you didn't have a visa then.
– phoog
Dec 6 at 19:22




I suppose the Irish officer was unable to admit you without a visa because of your plan to go to the UK along with your prior refusal of entry. The UK officer probably told you something that you misunderstood. US citizens do need visas for some purposes of travel, so if they decide that you're not a "genuine visitor" they might want a visa for the purpose they think you're pursuing. If you look at the stamp from your first visit you should see that you were given "leave to enter for six months," and you didn't have a visa then.
– phoog
Dec 6 at 19:22




7




7




I think for now the visiting must be the other way around i.e. your girlfriend/lover can be coming over to the USA instead. You seem to be taking the whole episode very lightly, which is both a good and a bad thing.
– Honorary World Citizen
Dec 6 at 21:15






I think for now the visiting must be the other way around i.e. your girlfriend/lover can be coming over to the USA instead. You seem to be taking the whole episode very lightly, which is both a good and a bad thing.
– Honorary World Citizen
Dec 6 at 21:15






7




7




@phoog I am 99% confident it was a refusal based on 4.2 (a) and (c), for which we have a fantastic overview question.
– JonathanReez
Dec 6 at 22:56




@phoog I am 99% confident it was a refusal based on 4.2 (a) and (c), for which we have a fantastic overview question.
– JonathanReez
Dec 6 at 22:56




10




10




As soon as I saw "I quit my job that same month", I knew why you'd have trouble: they thought you wanted to stay in Britain with your girlfriend.
– RonJohn
Dec 7 at 9:31




As soon as I saw "I quit my job that same month", I knew why you'd have trouble: they thought you wanted to stay in Britain with your girlfriend.
– RonJohn
Dec 7 at 9:31










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















78















Do anybody have any clue what I should do???




Seek help from an immigration lawyer. 2 entry refusals and 1 visa refusal are not helpful at all. I don't think you can solve this yourself now.



If you (or i) can sound desperate to ordinary folks like on this forum, we definitely will sound desperate to the immigration officers and a visa refusal for a non visa national is not really a small deal.






share|improve this answer



















  • 15




    +1 That is the only sensible advice. I don't see how he is getting into the UK without some very competent respected immigration attorney doing the heavy lifting for him.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    Dec 6 at 21:14



















51














At this point, stop digging. As Hanky Panky notes, you're looking increasingly desperate to get into the UK (buying multiple sets of international flights when you're unemployed and don't have sufficient funds to support yourself looks inherently suspicious), and you're producing an immigration record that will hurt your chances to get into the UK well into the future.



Personally, I'd wait. Arrange for your girlfriend to visit you in the US. We'd need to see the visa refusal letter to know why exactly you were refused, but in general, work on building up a stable life in the US so that it's clear you'll return home after your visit. A stable job and suitable savings so you can afford your trip and have plenty left over for after you get back will go a long way. Limit your stay to a shorter period of time, one consistent with a typical vacation from work. Travel elsewhere and return on time to demonstrate a travel history. Allow some time to pass so you do not appear fixated on entering the UK. From there, you could apply for entry clearance again, or hire a UK immigration lawyer to help prepare your application to give you the best chance of success.






share|improve this answer





























    8














    I completely agree this is likely a 42(a)/(c) refusal. Here's what's going on.



    You have no right to enter their country (that would be citizenship). You are asking for permission to enter ("leave to enter" is the British expression).



    Britain has several categories of visa, allowing different activities: tourism and misc. activities, employment, student (allowing limited employment), transit, etc. Americans get a visa waiver only for certain activities and employment is not one of them.



    Immigration's job is to screen out (“refuse") visitors who are likely to violate the terms of their visa. Top of the hitlist are:




    • seeking employment without an appropriate work visa. UK has some of the toughest rules on "employment", you can't even telecommute, do work for your USA employer for USA customers whilst being paid in USD to a US bank.

    • abusing public assistance/welfare ("going on the dole"), such as government provided housing, food assistance or health care

    • over-staying your visa, e.g. If you are allowed 6 months on visa waiver, staying a year.


    You present as a young person who's unemployed and with nowhere near enough money for the stay in Britain you have planned. By your choice of visa (Visa Waiver Program) you are swearing that you won't seek employ or go on the dole. But since you have no money, you inevitably must do one or the other... or go home early. That's an immutable law of financial reality. You're ignoring it... but they're not. The fact that you're spending the last of your money to make it to UK is also something they see a lot of.



    You also present (again as young people often do) as someone who is "adrift" or "footloose and fancy free", and doesn't have significant ties that would drag you back to the USA. In fact, your most significant tie is in Britain: your girlfriend. So the bulk of your facts show a greater likelihood to stay in the UK indefinitely, rather than ever return to the USA. So this, too, pops all the red flags for "overstayer".



    Lastly, repeated attempts to get into the UK (and not other countries) undercuts any claim of tourism. There are 185 other cool countries! So to UKVI, desperation to get in to the UK specifically, implies you know someone in the UK who has a job or situation waiting for you. And that rhymes with "overstay".



    How do you correct that? First, show that your life has financial solvency outside the UK. (Remember: no telecommuting). For instance if you own a bunch of rental properties that produce income, or a reasonable purpose for a time-limited UK visit, and more than plenty of funds to cary you through that. (Remember they really hate to see you spend your every last dollar on a UK visit).



    Second, have ties back in the US. Own a home. Have a good job. Have a hard-won, licensed profession that doesn't transfer easily to other jurisdictions (teacher, electrician, lawyer, lobbyist, etc.) Have a business that can't run forever on autopilot. Have a cultural or political role (nonprofit Board member, political activist, National Guard reservist.) Anything to show that you have something to go back to.



    Lastly, don't be desperate. In this case, you'd want to establish the above, and successfully tourist in other countries, before attempting UK again.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2




      "Say you own...": Note to the OP: This does not mean lie. It means actually own those things.
      – Kevin
      Dec 10 at 2:40










    • @Kevin good point. Edited.
      – Harper
      Dec 10 at 3:07










    • @Harper You referenced not being allowed to telecommute whilst in the UK, do you have a link or reference for that you can share specifically regarding telecommuting? I wasn't aware of such a rule
      – ChrisFletcher
      Dec 10 at 10:50












    • @ChrisFletcher I had the same reaction and found some info here. My understanding is that you can work remotely if it's incidental i.e. not the main reason of your trip. And the main reason of your trip must fall into one of the authorised activity. e.g. you're on vacation (authorised activity) and may work a little at the hotel (incidental) or you're attending a business conference (authorised activity) and may continue to work on the side (incidental). But if you come to the UK only to work remotely, this is illegal without a work visa.
      – zakinster
      Dec 10 at 13:50










    • I'm having trouble finding that again. It's not a tax issue, the issue is that if you're doing work, and your boots are on UK soil, you are working in the UK for immigration purposes. UK does not "notch out" an exception for telecommuting, other countries do (e.g. Canada). Ah, yes. Here we are! Note Gayet Fow's answer.
      – Harper
      Dec 10 at 17:24





















    5














    You've really dug yourself into a hole.



    You're treating the whole question of entry into another country far too lightly and you've really messed up your official record.



    You're going to need expert help in the form of a lawyer or an advisor who specialises in such matters.



    UK Immigration need to be totally satisfied that you have




    • sufficient funds (in terms of THEIR definition) for the duration of your stay (evidence of bank statements over a period of at least a year showing a consistent healthy balance)

    • a return ticket

    • good reasons to return (which would include a permanent job, accommodation, family etc.etc.)

    • demonstrable intention to return permanently to your home country.


    The present UK government was elected on a ticket of keeping out foreigners by taking tighter control of borders; you can expect their employees to do just that. If it's any consolation, the US authorities are similar, but much more brutal in their execution of the task.






    share|improve this answer





















    • A very good first answer!
      – Hanky Panky
      Dec 12 at 15:21



















    -1














    From what I read so far there is nothing wrong with you apart from the desperation the border officers see in you. You were just visiting the UK without concrete reason: to them, you were planning to move there illegally; US and Canadian immigration officers see the same and make the same judgments all the time. Just as Zach said, arrange for your girlfriend to visit. Another suggestion will be to allow for a reasonable time(6 months) before you try and visit again plus you better have a stable job then.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      I'm not sure what you mean by "visiting without concrete reason". Visiting his girlfriend seems pretty concrete to me. And what is "a reasonable time" before trying again?
      – David Richerby
      Dec 8 at 23:00












    • Those who travel to a country they are not resident in every couple of months either have strong ties to that country like family, business, or they study there. Using a tourist visa (or in this case VWP) to travel into a country (most especially western country) is frown upon. So when you say you going to visit your girlfriend you saw about 6 weeks ago is not viable("concrete") enough to gain entry. Reasonable time should be some around 6 months assume all other conditions are meant(finances, strong ties to your country of residence, like stable employ or steady source of income).
      – jealob
      Dec 8 at 23:37










    • "Concrete" means "definite", not "viable." And, after two refusals, trying again in six months sounds like a very bad idea.
      – David Richerby
      Dec 9 at 0:15












    • @ David so what is a good idea?
      – jealob
      Dec 9 at 5:24






    • 9




      As I write this, there are answers with 69 and 46 upvotes, respectively. They are the good ideas.
      – David Richerby
      Dec 9 at 11:31













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    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

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    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

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    active

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    78















    Do anybody have any clue what I should do???




    Seek help from an immigration lawyer. 2 entry refusals and 1 visa refusal are not helpful at all. I don't think you can solve this yourself now.



    If you (or i) can sound desperate to ordinary folks like on this forum, we definitely will sound desperate to the immigration officers and a visa refusal for a non visa national is not really a small deal.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 15




      +1 That is the only sensible advice. I don't see how he is getting into the UK without some very competent respected immigration attorney doing the heavy lifting for him.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      Dec 6 at 21:14
















    78















    Do anybody have any clue what I should do???




    Seek help from an immigration lawyer. 2 entry refusals and 1 visa refusal are not helpful at all. I don't think you can solve this yourself now.



    If you (or i) can sound desperate to ordinary folks like on this forum, we definitely will sound desperate to the immigration officers and a visa refusal for a non visa national is not really a small deal.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 15




      +1 That is the only sensible advice. I don't see how he is getting into the UK without some very competent respected immigration attorney doing the heavy lifting for him.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      Dec 6 at 21:14














    78












    78








    78







    Do anybody have any clue what I should do???




    Seek help from an immigration lawyer. 2 entry refusals and 1 visa refusal are not helpful at all. I don't think you can solve this yourself now.



    If you (or i) can sound desperate to ordinary folks like on this forum, we definitely will sound desperate to the immigration officers and a visa refusal for a non visa national is not really a small deal.






    share|improve this answer















    Do anybody have any clue what I should do???




    Seek help from an immigration lawyer. 2 entry refusals and 1 visa refusal are not helpful at all. I don't think you can solve this yourself now.



    If you (or i) can sound desperate to ordinary folks like on this forum, we definitely will sound desperate to the immigration officers and a visa refusal for a non visa national is not really a small deal.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 6 at 19:33

























    answered Dec 6 at 19:04









    Hanky Panky

    23.5k467114




    23.5k467114








    • 15




      +1 That is the only sensible advice. I don't see how he is getting into the UK without some very competent respected immigration attorney doing the heavy lifting for him.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      Dec 6 at 21:14














    • 15




      +1 That is the only sensible advice. I don't see how he is getting into the UK without some very competent respected immigration attorney doing the heavy lifting for him.
      – Honorary World Citizen
      Dec 6 at 21:14








    15




    15




    +1 That is the only sensible advice. I don't see how he is getting into the UK without some very competent respected immigration attorney doing the heavy lifting for him.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    Dec 6 at 21:14




    +1 That is the only sensible advice. I don't see how he is getting into the UK without some very competent respected immigration attorney doing the heavy lifting for him.
    – Honorary World Citizen
    Dec 6 at 21:14













    51














    At this point, stop digging. As Hanky Panky notes, you're looking increasingly desperate to get into the UK (buying multiple sets of international flights when you're unemployed and don't have sufficient funds to support yourself looks inherently suspicious), and you're producing an immigration record that will hurt your chances to get into the UK well into the future.



    Personally, I'd wait. Arrange for your girlfriend to visit you in the US. We'd need to see the visa refusal letter to know why exactly you were refused, but in general, work on building up a stable life in the US so that it's clear you'll return home after your visit. A stable job and suitable savings so you can afford your trip and have plenty left over for after you get back will go a long way. Limit your stay to a shorter period of time, one consistent with a typical vacation from work. Travel elsewhere and return on time to demonstrate a travel history. Allow some time to pass so you do not appear fixated on entering the UK. From there, you could apply for entry clearance again, or hire a UK immigration lawyer to help prepare your application to give you the best chance of success.






    share|improve this answer


























      51














      At this point, stop digging. As Hanky Panky notes, you're looking increasingly desperate to get into the UK (buying multiple sets of international flights when you're unemployed and don't have sufficient funds to support yourself looks inherently suspicious), and you're producing an immigration record that will hurt your chances to get into the UK well into the future.



      Personally, I'd wait. Arrange for your girlfriend to visit you in the US. We'd need to see the visa refusal letter to know why exactly you were refused, but in general, work on building up a stable life in the US so that it's clear you'll return home after your visit. A stable job and suitable savings so you can afford your trip and have plenty left over for after you get back will go a long way. Limit your stay to a shorter period of time, one consistent with a typical vacation from work. Travel elsewhere and return on time to demonstrate a travel history. Allow some time to pass so you do not appear fixated on entering the UK. From there, you could apply for entry clearance again, or hire a UK immigration lawyer to help prepare your application to give you the best chance of success.






      share|improve this answer
























        51












        51








        51






        At this point, stop digging. As Hanky Panky notes, you're looking increasingly desperate to get into the UK (buying multiple sets of international flights when you're unemployed and don't have sufficient funds to support yourself looks inherently suspicious), and you're producing an immigration record that will hurt your chances to get into the UK well into the future.



        Personally, I'd wait. Arrange for your girlfriend to visit you in the US. We'd need to see the visa refusal letter to know why exactly you were refused, but in general, work on building up a stable life in the US so that it's clear you'll return home after your visit. A stable job and suitable savings so you can afford your trip and have plenty left over for after you get back will go a long way. Limit your stay to a shorter period of time, one consistent with a typical vacation from work. Travel elsewhere and return on time to demonstrate a travel history. Allow some time to pass so you do not appear fixated on entering the UK. From there, you could apply for entry clearance again, or hire a UK immigration lawyer to help prepare your application to give you the best chance of success.






        share|improve this answer












        At this point, stop digging. As Hanky Panky notes, you're looking increasingly desperate to get into the UK (buying multiple sets of international flights when you're unemployed and don't have sufficient funds to support yourself looks inherently suspicious), and you're producing an immigration record that will hurt your chances to get into the UK well into the future.



        Personally, I'd wait. Arrange for your girlfriend to visit you in the US. We'd need to see the visa refusal letter to know why exactly you were refused, but in general, work on building up a stable life in the US so that it's clear you'll return home after your visit. A stable job and suitable savings so you can afford your trip and have plenty left over for after you get back will go a long way. Limit your stay to a shorter period of time, one consistent with a typical vacation from work. Travel elsewhere and return on time to demonstrate a travel history. Allow some time to pass so you do not appear fixated on entering the UK. From there, you could apply for entry clearance again, or hire a UK immigration lawyer to help prepare your application to give you the best chance of success.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 6 at 21:58









        Zach Lipton

        59.1k10179240




        59.1k10179240























            8














            I completely agree this is likely a 42(a)/(c) refusal. Here's what's going on.



            You have no right to enter their country (that would be citizenship). You are asking for permission to enter ("leave to enter" is the British expression).



            Britain has several categories of visa, allowing different activities: tourism and misc. activities, employment, student (allowing limited employment), transit, etc. Americans get a visa waiver only for certain activities and employment is not one of them.



            Immigration's job is to screen out (“refuse") visitors who are likely to violate the terms of their visa. Top of the hitlist are:




            • seeking employment without an appropriate work visa. UK has some of the toughest rules on "employment", you can't even telecommute, do work for your USA employer for USA customers whilst being paid in USD to a US bank.

            • abusing public assistance/welfare ("going on the dole"), such as government provided housing, food assistance or health care

            • over-staying your visa, e.g. If you are allowed 6 months on visa waiver, staying a year.


            You present as a young person who's unemployed and with nowhere near enough money for the stay in Britain you have planned. By your choice of visa (Visa Waiver Program) you are swearing that you won't seek employ or go on the dole. But since you have no money, you inevitably must do one or the other... or go home early. That's an immutable law of financial reality. You're ignoring it... but they're not. The fact that you're spending the last of your money to make it to UK is also something they see a lot of.



            You also present (again as young people often do) as someone who is "adrift" or "footloose and fancy free", and doesn't have significant ties that would drag you back to the USA. In fact, your most significant tie is in Britain: your girlfriend. So the bulk of your facts show a greater likelihood to stay in the UK indefinitely, rather than ever return to the USA. So this, too, pops all the red flags for "overstayer".



            Lastly, repeated attempts to get into the UK (and not other countries) undercuts any claim of tourism. There are 185 other cool countries! So to UKVI, desperation to get in to the UK specifically, implies you know someone in the UK who has a job or situation waiting for you. And that rhymes with "overstay".



            How do you correct that? First, show that your life has financial solvency outside the UK. (Remember: no telecommuting). For instance if you own a bunch of rental properties that produce income, or a reasonable purpose for a time-limited UK visit, and more than plenty of funds to cary you through that. (Remember they really hate to see you spend your every last dollar on a UK visit).



            Second, have ties back in the US. Own a home. Have a good job. Have a hard-won, licensed profession that doesn't transfer easily to other jurisdictions (teacher, electrician, lawyer, lobbyist, etc.) Have a business that can't run forever on autopilot. Have a cultural or political role (nonprofit Board member, political activist, National Guard reservist.) Anything to show that you have something to go back to.



            Lastly, don't be desperate. In this case, you'd want to establish the above, and successfully tourist in other countries, before attempting UK again.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 2




              "Say you own...": Note to the OP: This does not mean lie. It means actually own those things.
              – Kevin
              Dec 10 at 2:40










            • @Kevin good point. Edited.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 3:07










            • @Harper You referenced not being allowed to telecommute whilst in the UK, do you have a link or reference for that you can share specifically regarding telecommuting? I wasn't aware of such a rule
              – ChrisFletcher
              Dec 10 at 10:50












            • @ChrisFletcher I had the same reaction and found some info here. My understanding is that you can work remotely if it's incidental i.e. not the main reason of your trip. And the main reason of your trip must fall into one of the authorised activity. e.g. you're on vacation (authorised activity) and may work a little at the hotel (incidental) or you're attending a business conference (authorised activity) and may continue to work on the side (incidental). But if you come to the UK only to work remotely, this is illegal without a work visa.
              – zakinster
              Dec 10 at 13:50










            • I'm having trouble finding that again. It's not a tax issue, the issue is that if you're doing work, and your boots are on UK soil, you are working in the UK for immigration purposes. UK does not "notch out" an exception for telecommuting, other countries do (e.g. Canada). Ah, yes. Here we are! Note Gayet Fow's answer.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 17:24


















            8














            I completely agree this is likely a 42(a)/(c) refusal. Here's what's going on.



            You have no right to enter their country (that would be citizenship). You are asking for permission to enter ("leave to enter" is the British expression).



            Britain has several categories of visa, allowing different activities: tourism and misc. activities, employment, student (allowing limited employment), transit, etc. Americans get a visa waiver only for certain activities and employment is not one of them.



            Immigration's job is to screen out (“refuse") visitors who are likely to violate the terms of their visa. Top of the hitlist are:




            • seeking employment without an appropriate work visa. UK has some of the toughest rules on "employment", you can't even telecommute, do work for your USA employer for USA customers whilst being paid in USD to a US bank.

            • abusing public assistance/welfare ("going on the dole"), such as government provided housing, food assistance or health care

            • over-staying your visa, e.g. If you are allowed 6 months on visa waiver, staying a year.


            You present as a young person who's unemployed and with nowhere near enough money for the stay in Britain you have planned. By your choice of visa (Visa Waiver Program) you are swearing that you won't seek employ or go on the dole. But since you have no money, you inevitably must do one or the other... or go home early. That's an immutable law of financial reality. You're ignoring it... but they're not. The fact that you're spending the last of your money to make it to UK is also something they see a lot of.



            You also present (again as young people often do) as someone who is "adrift" or "footloose and fancy free", and doesn't have significant ties that would drag you back to the USA. In fact, your most significant tie is in Britain: your girlfriend. So the bulk of your facts show a greater likelihood to stay in the UK indefinitely, rather than ever return to the USA. So this, too, pops all the red flags for "overstayer".



            Lastly, repeated attempts to get into the UK (and not other countries) undercuts any claim of tourism. There are 185 other cool countries! So to UKVI, desperation to get in to the UK specifically, implies you know someone in the UK who has a job or situation waiting for you. And that rhymes with "overstay".



            How do you correct that? First, show that your life has financial solvency outside the UK. (Remember: no telecommuting). For instance if you own a bunch of rental properties that produce income, or a reasonable purpose for a time-limited UK visit, and more than plenty of funds to cary you through that. (Remember they really hate to see you spend your every last dollar on a UK visit).



            Second, have ties back in the US. Own a home. Have a good job. Have a hard-won, licensed profession that doesn't transfer easily to other jurisdictions (teacher, electrician, lawyer, lobbyist, etc.) Have a business that can't run forever on autopilot. Have a cultural or political role (nonprofit Board member, political activist, National Guard reservist.) Anything to show that you have something to go back to.



            Lastly, don't be desperate. In this case, you'd want to establish the above, and successfully tourist in other countries, before attempting UK again.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 2




              "Say you own...": Note to the OP: This does not mean lie. It means actually own those things.
              – Kevin
              Dec 10 at 2:40










            • @Kevin good point. Edited.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 3:07










            • @Harper You referenced not being allowed to telecommute whilst in the UK, do you have a link or reference for that you can share specifically regarding telecommuting? I wasn't aware of such a rule
              – ChrisFletcher
              Dec 10 at 10:50












            • @ChrisFletcher I had the same reaction and found some info here. My understanding is that you can work remotely if it's incidental i.e. not the main reason of your trip. And the main reason of your trip must fall into one of the authorised activity. e.g. you're on vacation (authorised activity) and may work a little at the hotel (incidental) or you're attending a business conference (authorised activity) and may continue to work on the side (incidental). But if you come to the UK only to work remotely, this is illegal without a work visa.
              – zakinster
              Dec 10 at 13:50










            • I'm having trouble finding that again. It's not a tax issue, the issue is that if you're doing work, and your boots are on UK soil, you are working in the UK for immigration purposes. UK does not "notch out" an exception for telecommuting, other countries do (e.g. Canada). Ah, yes. Here we are! Note Gayet Fow's answer.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 17:24
















            8












            8








            8






            I completely agree this is likely a 42(a)/(c) refusal. Here's what's going on.



            You have no right to enter their country (that would be citizenship). You are asking for permission to enter ("leave to enter" is the British expression).



            Britain has several categories of visa, allowing different activities: tourism and misc. activities, employment, student (allowing limited employment), transit, etc. Americans get a visa waiver only for certain activities and employment is not one of them.



            Immigration's job is to screen out (“refuse") visitors who are likely to violate the terms of their visa. Top of the hitlist are:




            • seeking employment without an appropriate work visa. UK has some of the toughest rules on "employment", you can't even telecommute, do work for your USA employer for USA customers whilst being paid in USD to a US bank.

            • abusing public assistance/welfare ("going on the dole"), such as government provided housing, food assistance or health care

            • over-staying your visa, e.g. If you are allowed 6 months on visa waiver, staying a year.


            You present as a young person who's unemployed and with nowhere near enough money for the stay in Britain you have planned. By your choice of visa (Visa Waiver Program) you are swearing that you won't seek employ or go on the dole. But since you have no money, you inevitably must do one or the other... or go home early. That's an immutable law of financial reality. You're ignoring it... but they're not. The fact that you're spending the last of your money to make it to UK is also something they see a lot of.



            You also present (again as young people often do) as someone who is "adrift" or "footloose and fancy free", and doesn't have significant ties that would drag you back to the USA. In fact, your most significant tie is in Britain: your girlfriend. So the bulk of your facts show a greater likelihood to stay in the UK indefinitely, rather than ever return to the USA. So this, too, pops all the red flags for "overstayer".



            Lastly, repeated attempts to get into the UK (and not other countries) undercuts any claim of tourism. There are 185 other cool countries! So to UKVI, desperation to get in to the UK specifically, implies you know someone in the UK who has a job or situation waiting for you. And that rhymes with "overstay".



            How do you correct that? First, show that your life has financial solvency outside the UK. (Remember: no telecommuting). For instance if you own a bunch of rental properties that produce income, or a reasonable purpose for a time-limited UK visit, and more than plenty of funds to cary you through that. (Remember they really hate to see you spend your every last dollar on a UK visit).



            Second, have ties back in the US. Own a home. Have a good job. Have a hard-won, licensed profession that doesn't transfer easily to other jurisdictions (teacher, electrician, lawyer, lobbyist, etc.) Have a business that can't run forever on autopilot. Have a cultural or political role (nonprofit Board member, political activist, National Guard reservist.) Anything to show that you have something to go back to.



            Lastly, don't be desperate. In this case, you'd want to establish the above, and successfully tourist in other countries, before attempting UK again.






            share|improve this answer














            I completely agree this is likely a 42(a)/(c) refusal. Here's what's going on.



            You have no right to enter their country (that would be citizenship). You are asking for permission to enter ("leave to enter" is the British expression).



            Britain has several categories of visa, allowing different activities: tourism and misc. activities, employment, student (allowing limited employment), transit, etc. Americans get a visa waiver only for certain activities and employment is not one of them.



            Immigration's job is to screen out (“refuse") visitors who are likely to violate the terms of their visa. Top of the hitlist are:




            • seeking employment without an appropriate work visa. UK has some of the toughest rules on "employment", you can't even telecommute, do work for your USA employer for USA customers whilst being paid in USD to a US bank.

            • abusing public assistance/welfare ("going on the dole"), such as government provided housing, food assistance or health care

            • over-staying your visa, e.g. If you are allowed 6 months on visa waiver, staying a year.


            You present as a young person who's unemployed and with nowhere near enough money for the stay in Britain you have planned. By your choice of visa (Visa Waiver Program) you are swearing that you won't seek employ or go on the dole. But since you have no money, you inevitably must do one or the other... or go home early. That's an immutable law of financial reality. You're ignoring it... but they're not. The fact that you're spending the last of your money to make it to UK is also something they see a lot of.



            You also present (again as young people often do) as someone who is "adrift" or "footloose and fancy free", and doesn't have significant ties that would drag you back to the USA. In fact, your most significant tie is in Britain: your girlfriend. So the bulk of your facts show a greater likelihood to stay in the UK indefinitely, rather than ever return to the USA. So this, too, pops all the red flags for "overstayer".



            Lastly, repeated attempts to get into the UK (and not other countries) undercuts any claim of tourism. There are 185 other cool countries! So to UKVI, desperation to get in to the UK specifically, implies you know someone in the UK who has a job or situation waiting for you. And that rhymes with "overstay".



            How do you correct that? First, show that your life has financial solvency outside the UK. (Remember: no telecommuting). For instance if you own a bunch of rental properties that produce income, or a reasonable purpose for a time-limited UK visit, and more than plenty of funds to cary you through that. (Remember they really hate to see you spend your every last dollar on a UK visit).



            Second, have ties back in the US. Own a home. Have a good job. Have a hard-won, licensed profession that doesn't transfer easily to other jurisdictions (teacher, electrician, lawyer, lobbyist, etc.) Have a business that can't run forever on autopilot. Have a cultural or political role (nonprofit Board member, political activist, National Guard reservist.) Anything to show that you have something to go back to.



            Lastly, don't be desperate. In this case, you'd want to establish the above, and successfully tourist in other countries, before attempting UK again.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 10 at 3:07

























            answered Dec 9 at 23:52









            Harper

            9,47131848




            9,47131848








            • 2




              "Say you own...": Note to the OP: This does not mean lie. It means actually own those things.
              – Kevin
              Dec 10 at 2:40










            • @Kevin good point. Edited.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 3:07










            • @Harper You referenced not being allowed to telecommute whilst in the UK, do you have a link or reference for that you can share specifically regarding telecommuting? I wasn't aware of such a rule
              – ChrisFletcher
              Dec 10 at 10:50












            • @ChrisFletcher I had the same reaction and found some info here. My understanding is that you can work remotely if it's incidental i.e. not the main reason of your trip. And the main reason of your trip must fall into one of the authorised activity. e.g. you're on vacation (authorised activity) and may work a little at the hotel (incidental) or you're attending a business conference (authorised activity) and may continue to work on the side (incidental). But if you come to the UK only to work remotely, this is illegal without a work visa.
              – zakinster
              Dec 10 at 13:50










            • I'm having trouble finding that again. It's not a tax issue, the issue is that if you're doing work, and your boots are on UK soil, you are working in the UK for immigration purposes. UK does not "notch out" an exception for telecommuting, other countries do (e.g. Canada). Ah, yes. Here we are! Note Gayet Fow's answer.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 17:24
















            • 2




              "Say you own...": Note to the OP: This does not mean lie. It means actually own those things.
              – Kevin
              Dec 10 at 2:40










            • @Kevin good point. Edited.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 3:07










            • @Harper You referenced not being allowed to telecommute whilst in the UK, do you have a link or reference for that you can share specifically regarding telecommuting? I wasn't aware of such a rule
              – ChrisFletcher
              Dec 10 at 10:50












            • @ChrisFletcher I had the same reaction and found some info here. My understanding is that you can work remotely if it's incidental i.e. not the main reason of your trip. And the main reason of your trip must fall into one of the authorised activity. e.g. you're on vacation (authorised activity) and may work a little at the hotel (incidental) or you're attending a business conference (authorised activity) and may continue to work on the side (incidental). But if you come to the UK only to work remotely, this is illegal without a work visa.
              – zakinster
              Dec 10 at 13:50










            • I'm having trouble finding that again. It's not a tax issue, the issue is that if you're doing work, and your boots are on UK soil, you are working in the UK for immigration purposes. UK does not "notch out" an exception for telecommuting, other countries do (e.g. Canada). Ah, yes. Here we are! Note Gayet Fow's answer.
              – Harper
              Dec 10 at 17:24










            2




            2




            "Say you own...": Note to the OP: This does not mean lie. It means actually own those things.
            – Kevin
            Dec 10 at 2:40




            "Say you own...": Note to the OP: This does not mean lie. It means actually own those things.
            – Kevin
            Dec 10 at 2:40












            @Kevin good point. Edited.
            – Harper
            Dec 10 at 3:07




            @Kevin good point. Edited.
            – Harper
            Dec 10 at 3:07












            @Harper You referenced not being allowed to telecommute whilst in the UK, do you have a link or reference for that you can share specifically regarding telecommuting? I wasn't aware of such a rule
            – ChrisFletcher
            Dec 10 at 10:50






            @Harper You referenced not being allowed to telecommute whilst in the UK, do you have a link or reference for that you can share specifically regarding telecommuting? I wasn't aware of such a rule
            – ChrisFletcher
            Dec 10 at 10:50














            @ChrisFletcher I had the same reaction and found some info here. My understanding is that you can work remotely if it's incidental i.e. not the main reason of your trip. And the main reason of your trip must fall into one of the authorised activity. e.g. you're on vacation (authorised activity) and may work a little at the hotel (incidental) or you're attending a business conference (authorised activity) and may continue to work on the side (incidental). But if you come to the UK only to work remotely, this is illegal without a work visa.
            – zakinster
            Dec 10 at 13:50




            @ChrisFletcher I had the same reaction and found some info here. My understanding is that you can work remotely if it's incidental i.e. not the main reason of your trip. And the main reason of your trip must fall into one of the authorised activity. e.g. you're on vacation (authorised activity) and may work a little at the hotel (incidental) or you're attending a business conference (authorised activity) and may continue to work on the side (incidental). But if you come to the UK only to work remotely, this is illegal without a work visa.
            – zakinster
            Dec 10 at 13:50












            I'm having trouble finding that again. It's not a tax issue, the issue is that if you're doing work, and your boots are on UK soil, you are working in the UK for immigration purposes. UK does not "notch out" an exception for telecommuting, other countries do (e.g. Canada). Ah, yes. Here we are! Note Gayet Fow's answer.
            – Harper
            Dec 10 at 17:24






            I'm having trouble finding that again. It's not a tax issue, the issue is that if you're doing work, and your boots are on UK soil, you are working in the UK for immigration purposes. UK does not "notch out" an exception for telecommuting, other countries do (e.g. Canada). Ah, yes. Here we are! Note Gayet Fow's answer.
            – Harper
            Dec 10 at 17:24













            5














            You've really dug yourself into a hole.



            You're treating the whole question of entry into another country far too lightly and you've really messed up your official record.



            You're going to need expert help in the form of a lawyer or an advisor who specialises in such matters.



            UK Immigration need to be totally satisfied that you have




            • sufficient funds (in terms of THEIR definition) for the duration of your stay (evidence of bank statements over a period of at least a year showing a consistent healthy balance)

            • a return ticket

            • good reasons to return (which would include a permanent job, accommodation, family etc.etc.)

            • demonstrable intention to return permanently to your home country.


            The present UK government was elected on a ticket of keeping out foreigners by taking tighter control of borders; you can expect their employees to do just that. If it's any consolation, the US authorities are similar, but much more brutal in their execution of the task.






            share|improve this answer





















            • A very good first answer!
              – Hanky Panky
              Dec 12 at 15:21
















            5














            You've really dug yourself into a hole.



            You're treating the whole question of entry into another country far too lightly and you've really messed up your official record.



            You're going to need expert help in the form of a lawyer or an advisor who specialises in such matters.



            UK Immigration need to be totally satisfied that you have




            • sufficient funds (in terms of THEIR definition) for the duration of your stay (evidence of bank statements over a period of at least a year showing a consistent healthy balance)

            • a return ticket

            • good reasons to return (which would include a permanent job, accommodation, family etc.etc.)

            • demonstrable intention to return permanently to your home country.


            The present UK government was elected on a ticket of keeping out foreigners by taking tighter control of borders; you can expect their employees to do just that. If it's any consolation, the US authorities are similar, but much more brutal in their execution of the task.






            share|improve this answer





















            • A very good first answer!
              – Hanky Panky
              Dec 12 at 15:21














            5












            5








            5






            You've really dug yourself into a hole.



            You're treating the whole question of entry into another country far too lightly and you've really messed up your official record.



            You're going to need expert help in the form of a lawyer or an advisor who specialises in such matters.



            UK Immigration need to be totally satisfied that you have




            • sufficient funds (in terms of THEIR definition) for the duration of your stay (evidence of bank statements over a period of at least a year showing a consistent healthy balance)

            • a return ticket

            • good reasons to return (which would include a permanent job, accommodation, family etc.etc.)

            • demonstrable intention to return permanently to your home country.


            The present UK government was elected on a ticket of keeping out foreigners by taking tighter control of borders; you can expect their employees to do just that. If it's any consolation, the US authorities are similar, but much more brutal in their execution of the task.






            share|improve this answer












            You've really dug yourself into a hole.



            You're treating the whole question of entry into another country far too lightly and you've really messed up your official record.



            You're going to need expert help in the form of a lawyer or an advisor who specialises in such matters.



            UK Immigration need to be totally satisfied that you have




            • sufficient funds (in terms of THEIR definition) for the duration of your stay (evidence of bank statements over a period of at least a year showing a consistent healthy balance)

            • a return ticket

            • good reasons to return (which would include a permanent job, accommodation, family etc.etc.)

            • demonstrable intention to return permanently to your home country.


            The present UK government was elected on a ticket of keeping out foreigners by taking tighter control of borders; you can expect their employees to do just that. If it's any consolation, the US authorities are similar, but much more brutal in their execution of the task.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 12 at 15:17









            John MacLeod

            811




            811












            • A very good first answer!
              – Hanky Panky
              Dec 12 at 15:21


















            • A very good first answer!
              – Hanky Panky
              Dec 12 at 15:21
















            A very good first answer!
            – Hanky Panky
            Dec 12 at 15:21




            A very good first answer!
            – Hanky Panky
            Dec 12 at 15:21











            -1














            From what I read so far there is nothing wrong with you apart from the desperation the border officers see in you. You were just visiting the UK without concrete reason: to them, you were planning to move there illegally; US and Canadian immigration officers see the same and make the same judgments all the time. Just as Zach said, arrange for your girlfriend to visit. Another suggestion will be to allow for a reasonable time(6 months) before you try and visit again plus you better have a stable job then.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              I'm not sure what you mean by "visiting without concrete reason". Visiting his girlfriend seems pretty concrete to me. And what is "a reasonable time" before trying again?
              – David Richerby
              Dec 8 at 23:00












            • Those who travel to a country they are not resident in every couple of months either have strong ties to that country like family, business, or they study there. Using a tourist visa (or in this case VWP) to travel into a country (most especially western country) is frown upon. So when you say you going to visit your girlfriend you saw about 6 weeks ago is not viable("concrete") enough to gain entry. Reasonable time should be some around 6 months assume all other conditions are meant(finances, strong ties to your country of residence, like stable employ or steady source of income).
              – jealob
              Dec 8 at 23:37










            • "Concrete" means "definite", not "viable." And, after two refusals, trying again in six months sounds like a very bad idea.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 0:15












            • @ David so what is a good idea?
              – jealob
              Dec 9 at 5:24






            • 9




              As I write this, there are answers with 69 and 46 upvotes, respectively. They are the good ideas.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 11:31


















            -1














            From what I read so far there is nothing wrong with you apart from the desperation the border officers see in you. You were just visiting the UK without concrete reason: to them, you were planning to move there illegally; US and Canadian immigration officers see the same and make the same judgments all the time. Just as Zach said, arrange for your girlfriend to visit. Another suggestion will be to allow for a reasonable time(6 months) before you try and visit again plus you better have a stable job then.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              I'm not sure what you mean by "visiting without concrete reason". Visiting his girlfriend seems pretty concrete to me. And what is "a reasonable time" before trying again?
              – David Richerby
              Dec 8 at 23:00












            • Those who travel to a country they are not resident in every couple of months either have strong ties to that country like family, business, or they study there. Using a tourist visa (or in this case VWP) to travel into a country (most especially western country) is frown upon. So when you say you going to visit your girlfriend you saw about 6 weeks ago is not viable("concrete") enough to gain entry. Reasonable time should be some around 6 months assume all other conditions are meant(finances, strong ties to your country of residence, like stable employ or steady source of income).
              – jealob
              Dec 8 at 23:37










            • "Concrete" means "definite", not "viable." And, after two refusals, trying again in six months sounds like a very bad idea.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 0:15












            • @ David so what is a good idea?
              – jealob
              Dec 9 at 5:24






            • 9




              As I write this, there are answers with 69 and 46 upvotes, respectively. They are the good ideas.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 11:31
















            -1












            -1








            -1






            From what I read so far there is nothing wrong with you apart from the desperation the border officers see in you. You were just visiting the UK without concrete reason: to them, you were planning to move there illegally; US and Canadian immigration officers see the same and make the same judgments all the time. Just as Zach said, arrange for your girlfriend to visit. Another suggestion will be to allow for a reasonable time(6 months) before you try and visit again plus you better have a stable job then.






            share|improve this answer














            From what I read so far there is nothing wrong with you apart from the desperation the border officers see in you. You were just visiting the UK without concrete reason: to them, you were planning to move there illegally; US and Canadian immigration officers see the same and make the same judgments all the time. Just as Zach said, arrange for your girlfriend to visit. Another suggestion will be to allow for a reasonable time(6 months) before you try and visit again plus you better have a stable job then.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 8 at 23:48

























            answered Dec 7 at 22:54









            jealob

            172




            172








            • 1




              I'm not sure what you mean by "visiting without concrete reason". Visiting his girlfriend seems pretty concrete to me. And what is "a reasonable time" before trying again?
              – David Richerby
              Dec 8 at 23:00












            • Those who travel to a country they are not resident in every couple of months either have strong ties to that country like family, business, or they study there. Using a tourist visa (or in this case VWP) to travel into a country (most especially western country) is frown upon. So when you say you going to visit your girlfriend you saw about 6 weeks ago is not viable("concrete") enough to gain entry. Reasonable time should be some around 6 months assume all other conditions are meant(finances, strong ties to your country of residence, like stable employ or steady source of income).
              – jealob
              Dec 8 at 23:37










            • "Concrete" means "definite", not "viable." And, after two refusals, trying again in six months sounds like a very bad idea.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 0:15












            • @ David so what is a good idea?
              – jealob
              Dec 9 at 5:24






            • 9




              As I write this, there are answers with 69 and 46 upvotes, respectively. They are the good ideas.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 11:31
















            • 1




              I'm not sure what you mean by "visiting without concrete reason". Visiting his girlfriend seems pretty concrete to me. And what is "a reasonable time" before trying again?
              – David Richerby
              Dec 8 at 23:00












            • Those who travel to a country they are not resident in every couple of months either have strong ties to that country like family, business, or they study there. Using a tourist visa (or in this case VWP) to travel into a country (most especially western country) is frown upon. So when you say you going to visit your girlfriend you saw about 6 weeks ago is not viable("concrete") enough to gain entry. Reasonable time should be some around 6 months assume all other conditions are meant(finances, strong ties to your country of residence, like stable employ or steady source of income).
              – jealob
              Dec 8 at 23:37










            • "Concrete" means "definite", not "viable." And, after two refusals, trying again in six months sounds like a very bad idea.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 0:15












            • @ David so what is a good idea?
              – jealob
              Dec 9 at 5:24






            • 9




              As I write this, there are answers with 69 and 46 upvotes, respectively. They are the good ideas.
              – David Richerby
              Dec 9 at 11:31










            1




            1




            I'm not sure what you mean by "visiting without concrete reason". Visiting his girlfriend seems pretty concrete to me. And what is "a reasonable time" before trying again?
            – David Richerby
            Dec 8 at 23:00






            I'm not sure what you mean by "visiting without concrete reason". Visiting his girlfriend seems pretty concrete to me. And what is "a reasonable time" before trying again?
            – David Richerby
            Dec 8 at 23:00














            Those who travel to a country they are not resident in every couple of months either have strong ties to that country like family, business, or they study there. Using a tourist visa (or in this case VWP) to travel into a country (most especially western country) is frown upon. So when you say you going to visit your girlfriend you saw about 6 weeks ago is not viable("concrete") enough to gain entry. Reasonable time should be some around 6 months assume all other conditions are meant(finances, strong ties to your country of residence, like stable employ or steady source of income).
            – jealob
            Dec 8 at 23:37




            Those who travel to a country they are not resident in every couple of months either have strong ties to that country like family, business, or they study there. Using a tourist visa (or in this case VWP) to travel into a country (most especially western country) is frown upon. So when you say you going to visit your girlfriend you saw about 6 weeks ago is not viable("concrete") enough to gain entry. Reasonable time should be some around 6 months assume all other conditions are meant(finances, strong ties to your country of residence, like stable employ or steady source of income).
            – jealob
            Dec 8 at 23:37












            "Concrete" means "definite", not "viable." And, after two refusals, trying again in six months sounds like a very bad idea.
            – David Richerby
            Dec 9 at 0:15






            "Concrete" means "definite", not "viable." And, after two refusals, trying again in six months sounds like a very bad idea.
            – David Richerby
            Dec 9 at 0:15














            @ David so what is a good idea?
            – jealob
            Dec 9 at 5:24




            @ David so what is a good idea?
            – jealob
            Dec 9 at 5:24




            9




            9




            As I write this, there are answers with 69 and 46 upvotes, respectively. They are the good ideas.
            – David Richerby
            Dec 9 at 11:31






            As I write this, there are answers with 69 and 46 upvotes, respectively. They are the good ideas.
            – David Richerby
            Dec 9 at 11:31




















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