This year I’m marrying a Thai woman. I plan in limit six months in Thailand and six months in the US what would be the best visa for me for Thailand and then Visa for my wife to come to the US and maybe work if she wants
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TLDR : Answer Summary
The best visa options for expats considering part-time residency between Thailand and the US after marrying a Thai woman involve obtaining a Non-O marriage visa for Thailand and a K1 fiancé visa or a green card for the spouse in the US. The K1 visa allows for marriage in the US within 90 days of arrival, while a green card can be secured if married for more than two years. It is important to maintain legal status in both countries by adhering to visa rules and ensuring timely applications for extensions and re-entry permits in Thailand.
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Get the Fiancee visa! 90-day U.S. visa, marry in the U.S. Apply for social security number and green card asap. She can work, and than travel freely back and forth to Thailand and to the U.S. Easier then marrying in Thailand!
they would not give my wife a Social Security card because they said she had no reason to have one and I said what if she wants to work and they said come back when she gets her work permit. They did give her an ITN number.
Donald ******
Your info is wrong! Do not know who you talk to, but look online an ITN is a temporary work ID number! She can work and is a precursor for her green card! Make sure she files taxes and pays bills, and wait the 12 to 18 months for card! Apply for the card!
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Donald ******
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SJ *******
Once she has citizenship and a green card what will she need you for?
😊 i’ve known this woman for quite a while. It took a number of years to get her to marriage. I’m retiring and I wanna live part time in northern Thailand and the rest in the United States. She’s 15 years younger and she wants to work because she still has one child at home. The grass is always greener for some on the other side of the fence.
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Kenneth ********
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Shwe *******
Marry her. Get green card for her. She can enter to US with green card anytime without applying US visa again and again.
Stephen ******
You no something happy day I have read all the comments and there was only good inflammation from people instead of the usual ones that wish to take the piss and make remarks that demoralise people happy day hope everything works out well for you mate
Uday ********
Take your time na,dont hurry na,you will cry later na
Www.visajourney.com for up to date info and timelines. I did a K-1 visa and it took about nine months.
Wayne ********
I do the same and I have a regular Thai married Visa. The only thing you have to remember is when you leave to go back to the US make sure number one you are back before your Extension expires. And two you get a re-entry permit. My extension always expires on 31 January and I go in December to apply for my new extension usually 45 days before 31 January because that’s what they allow in my province. At the I time of the extension application I get a 30 day under consideration stamp, which starts the day my current extension expires, so then I come back on 28 February and get my one year stamp. Same routine every year. My wife came to the US on a fiancé visa we got married she decided she did not want to live in the US because there was no Thai culture around where I live. So we both came back to Thailand and she applied for a tourist visa, which is good for 10 years multiple entry And of the six months that I am in the US. She comes and stays three months then we go back together. Your wife cannot work in the US legally without a work permit and you can only get that if you apply for a change of status (Application for permanent Residency). Hope this helps a little. I do understand that it’s easier to get a fiancé visa K1 then a. K3 marriage visa.
if a US citizen is married to a Thai citizen, is the Thai citizen eligible to get the spouse benefit in relation to Social Security if the US citizen dies before the Thai?
Wayne ********
The last time I looked into it, John, your wife has to be a legal resident of the US and must have been living in the United States for a minimum of five years prior to your death. There are some other requirements that I don’t know of offhand, but I believe those are the two main requirements.
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Wayne ********
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Wylie *******
Once you are married, but less than 2 years, she needs to apply for the CR1 visa. IR1 if longer than 2 years.
in my opinion the K3 visa is easier because it allows her to come to the United States prior to her non-immigrant permanent residency is approved. The CR1 I believe has to be approved by USCIS before she can come to the United States, which can be a year to 18 months depending on their backlog.
the op also doesn't explicitly say they will marry outside the US so could apply for the K1 fiance visa to get married in the US. Although that likely wouldn't be approved in time to get married this year.
A prenup is ALWAYS a good idea, in ANY marriage! Take it from someone who has learned the hard way! Last marriage took 11 years to pay off HER dept! 🤦🙄 My point is; This is not a race or ethnicity thing, it's a legally binding thing 😉
not necessarily. People change and you only need to look at divorce rates both with American and foreign born spouses. If you chose the right partner for marriage then the prenup means nothing but if something happens you don’t lose everything nor do you have to go through a long bitter divorce. Good luck with your upcoming wedding!!
Currently, you can do 2 visa exemptions and 2 extensions with a couple days spent outside of Thailand in between the two 90 day stays, for you.
For your fiancé, it would probably be a few less steps in the process if she gets a K1 fiancé visa and get married in the US within 90 days of arrival.
Or, get married in Thailand and begin the process here in Thailand.
My wife did the K1 visa. She became a US citizen and had an overwhelmingly successful Thai restaurant in the US. 13 years of the restaurant got us into retirement in Thailand for the winter 6 months and the US for Major League Baseball season. Been doing that for 3 years.
The only difference is that I recently got the Non-O marriage visa after jumping through plenty of hoops.
Just remember, if you’re not nice to the Thai immigration officers, they can make it very difficult for you.
In our 35 years, we never paid a bribe, never will.
Chris *********
Congratulations, will you be having the Thai village wedding and the embassy wedding?
Brandon ************
If your wife wants to spend time in the US and to possibly work, she doesn't need a visa. You need to get her a green card through marriage. The process can take 12-18 months.
they increased staff a lot the last couple years to get through the backlog. The old recommendation to do K1 to go faster hasn't applied in a while. But they caught up so much they let go of all the contract workers they were using to make the process faster so the time frame is increasing again.