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If your sponsoring the visit, you can show your bank statments is it a family visitor.srichar3 wrote:If your sponsoring a visitor who has little to no available funds, does it matter as slong as the sponsor can show sufficient available funds?
Regards Steve
Does this explain it to youmvent00 wrote:terriblescream wrote:I believe bf will not be considered as a family visitor!
Any specific reason for your claim?
VAT2.2 What is a family visitor?
Under the Immigration Appeals (Family Visitor) Regulations 2003, a family visitor is defined as someone who intends to visit someone who is related to them in the following way:
the applicant's spouse, father, mother, son, daughter, grandfather, grandmother, grandson, granddaughter, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece or first cousin (note: "first cousin" means, in relation to a person, the son or daughter of his uncle or aunt);
the father, mother, brother or sister of the applicant's spouse;
the spouse of the applicant's son or daughter;
the applicant's stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother or stepsister; or
a person with whom the applicant has lived as a member of an unmarried couple for at least two of the three years before the day on which his application for entry clearance was made
batleykhan wrote:Does this explain it to youmvent00 wrote:terriblescream wrote:I believe bf will not be considered as a family visitor!
Any specific reason for your claim?
VAT2.2 What is a family visitor?
Under the Immigration Appeals (Family Visitor) Regulations 2003, a family visitor is defined as someone who intends to visit someone who is related to them in the following way:
the applicant's spouse, father, mother, son, daughter, grandfather, grandmother, grandson, granddaughter, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece or first cousin (note: "first cousin" means, in relation to a person, the son or daughter of his uncle or aunt);
the father, mother, brother or sister of the applicant's spouse;
the spouse of the applicant's son or daughter;
the applicant's stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother or stepsister; or
a person with whom the applicant has lived as a member of an unmarried couple for at least two of the three years before the day on which his application for entry clearance was made
Does it not cover a boyfriend? I am sure it does. Anyway, OP's question did not include a family member, but a sponsor. Anyone can be a sponsor, such as a friend, a company, an organization, etc, and as long as a sponsor can fulfil necessary requirements, there should be no problem with a successful visa application.