English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I'm an American citizen currently in college in the US. I don't want to get married young, but I want to be with my boyfriend post-grad as he lives in the Netherlands.

I want to go to graduate school in America though (for American law), so that means at least another 3 years post-bachelors. Is it possible to not get married and somehow have him move here even if he's not a student (meaning no F-1 visa) and if he does not have a specialized trade?

2006-11-30 20:31:30 · 9 answers · asked by Justine 1 in Politics & Government Immigration

Poster 1--haha, I accidentally added the question mark after the first part. Shite.

2006-11-30 20:35:20 · update #1

Poster 5: Yeah, basically. I'm too young to get married but not too young to have him live with me and pay for my rent haha...This is growing up. At least I'm not immature enough to marry at the spur of the moment and think it will actually last.

2006-11-30 20:45:09 · update #2

9 answers

He can apply for permanent residency.
He can apply for a work visa if a company hires him.
Really there is no other way but those unless you two get married.

2006-11-30 22:18:49 · answer #1 · answered by LC 5 · 1 0

He could incite some sort of hat feather revolution and come to the U.S. seeking amnesty. For this to work though, the revolution has to be one that the American government opposes. I recommend working with the Communist Hat Feather Party:
www.hatfeatherproletariat.org
I worry that my answer is almost TOO helpful. You have my apologies if this is in fact the case.

2006-11-30 21:21:23 · answer #2 · answered by Mark P 5 · 0 1

in case you petition for a fiancé(e) visa, you may want to teach that: You (the petitioner) are a U.S. citizen. you ought to marry interior of ninety days of your fiancé(e) entering the united states. You and your fiancé(e) are both loose to marry and any previous marriages might want to were legally terminated through divorce, death, or annulment. You met one yet another, in human being, a minimum of once interior of two years of submitting your petition. There are 2 exceptions that require a waiver: a million. If the requirement to satisfy might want to violate strict and primary customs of your or your fiancé(e)’s overseas way of existence or social practice. 2. in case you teach that the requirement to satisfy might want to effect in intense worry to you. After the Fiancé(e) Visa is Issued once issued, the fiancé(e) visa (or ok-a million nonimmigrant visa) facilitates your fiancé(e) to enter the united states for ninety days so as that your bridal ceremony can ensue. once you marry, your significant different might want to practice for everlasting position of abode and stay in the united states at the same time as USCIS methods the software. for further information, see the “eco-friendly Card” hyperlink to the right.

2016-10-08 01:16:56 · answer #3 · answered by prinsh 4 · 0 0

Maybe. He's dane so he's low risk. Maybe a long term extended tourist visa renewed every year or so?

2006-11-30 21:21:04 · answer #4 · answered by Julio Cesar C 2 · 0 0

So, you're wanting him to come over here so you can shack up while in college? Grow up! He would have to become a citizen or marry you.

2006-11-30 20:42:51 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

have him get you pregnant then have his 'anchor baby'......sometimes helps :D

otherwise have him just file a visa application with what skills he does have and hope for the best......america loves more europeans here.

2006-11-30 20:42:29 · answer #6 · answered by Sizzle Pizzle 3 · 1 0

he has to become a citizen of the United States of America in order to enter here. Otherwise, he's one statistic of the illegal immigrants that everyone in the states is complaining about.

2006-11-30 20:33:49 · answer #7 · answered by Cold Fart 6 · 0 3

if he joins some branch of the army,airforce,or navy he could come here(the illegal problem people are talking about is only mexicans all other can come here without be discriminated against)

2006-11-30 20:35:09 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

are you asking if he's dutch ?
get a sponsor for citizenship

2006-11-30 20:33:03 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

fedest.com, questions and answers