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My dual citizen son (US and Australia) wants to marry a US citizen but live in Australia
Leaving Australia as a dual national but without an Australian passportBorn in Ghana, West Africa to British parents - can my kids get British passportsWhat is the process to cancel my child's Chinese citizenship?British citizenship of adopted son. I'm British by birth and live in AmericaDual citizenship and marriageDual Citizenship and BrexitRegistering French nationality - name change and where to get helpFilipino child of a US citizen refused a non-immigrant visaDual citizen leaving Australia on a German passportI am a dual citizen of Canada and US looking to marry a Canadian Citizen
I cannot find any information on this scenario:
My son was born in Australia (and lives in Australia) and received his US citizenship via a Consular Report of Birth Abroad due to me being a US citizen/Australian Citizen.
We thought it might be better if they married in the US due to both being US citizens, but then after the wedding they plan to move back to Australia. Which visa would she travel to Australia on?
dual-citizenship
New contributor
add a comment |
I cannot find any information on this scenario:
My son was born in Australia (and lives in Australia) and received his US citizenship via a Consular Report of Birth Abroad due to me being a US citizen/Australian Citizen.
We thought it might be better if they married in the US due to both being US citizens, but then after the wedding they plan to move back to Australia. Which visa would she travel to Australia on?
dual-citizenship
New contributor
add a comment |
I cannot find any information on this scenario:
My son was born in Australia (and lives in Australia) and received his US citizenship via a Consular Report of Birth Abroad due to me being a US citizen/Australian Citizen.
We thought it might be better if they married in the US due to both being US citizens, but then after the wedding they plan to move back to Australia. Which visa would she travel to Australia on?
dual-citizenship
New contributor
I cannot find any information on this scenario:
My son was born in Australia (and lives in Australia) and received his US citizenship via a Consular Report of Birth Abroad due to me being a US citizen/Australian Citizen.
We thought it might be better if they married in the US due to both being US citizens, but then after the wedding they plan to move back to Australia. Which visa would she travel to Australia on?
dual-citizenship
dual-citizenship
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 2 hours ago
Mandy JenningsMandy Jennings
111
111
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It does not matter where the wedding is actually performed. Both the US and Australia (like virtually all countries) recognise marriages that have been legally performed according to the laws of the country where the wedding took place.
If they get married in the US, then after getting married, your son's wife would apply for one of the Australian Partner Visas.
If they get married in Australia, she would come to Australia with a Prospective Marriage Visa.
I see that the cost of both of these visas is an eye-watering AU$7,160, and it might be some time before the application is approved (expected processing times are shown on the web site).
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It does not matter where the wedding is actually performed. Both the US and Australia (like virtually all countries) recognise marriages that have been legally performed according to the laws of the country where the wedding took place.
If they get married in the US, then after getting married, your son's wife would apply for one of the Australian Partner Visas.
If they get married in Australia, she would come to Australia with a Prospective Marriage Visa.
I see that the cost of both of these visas is an eye-watering AU$7,160, and it might be some time before the application is approved (expected processing times are shown on the web site).
add a comment |
It does not matter where the wedding is actually performed. Both the US and Australia (like virtually all countries) recognise marriages that have been legally performed according to the laws of the country where the wedding took place.
If they get married in the US, then after getting married, your son's wife would apply for one of the Australian Partner Visas.
If they get married in Australia, she would come to Australia with a Prospective Marriage Visa.
I see that the cost of both of these visas is an eye-watering AU$7,160, and it might be some time before the application is approved (expected processing times are shown on the web site).
add a comment |
It does not matter where the wedding is actually performed. Both the US and Australia (like virtually all countries) recognise marriages that have been legally performed according to the laws of the country where the wedding took place.
If they get married in the US, then after getting married, your son's wife would apply for one of the Australian Partner Visas.
If they get married in Australia, she would come to Australia with a Prospective Marriage Visa.
I see that the cost of both of these visas is an eye-watering AU$7,160, and it might be some time before the application is approved (expected processing times are shown on the web site).
It does not matter where the wedding is actually performed. Both the US and Australia (like virtually all countries) recognise marriages that have been legally performed according to the laws of the country where the wedding took place.
If they get married in the US, then after getting married, your son's wife would apply for one of the Australian Partner Visas.
If they get married in Australia, she would come to Australia with a Prospective Marriage Visa.
I see that the cost of both of these visas is an eye-watering AU$7,160, and it might be some time before the application is approved (expected processing times are shown on the web site).
answered 2 hours ago
Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill
4,005618
4,005618
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Mandy Jennings is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Mandy Jennings is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Mandy Jennings is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Mandy Jennings is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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