Hong Kong Visas Made Easy

18

Feb 2020

And Now For Something Completely Different (TP Is A Human Right! – Toilet Paper Shortage In Hong Kong)

Posted by / in Musing / No responses

Toilet Paper Shortage In Hong Kong: I was ambling along Bowen Road a couple of days ago on my daily walk when I met this very interesting lady who was lamenting the state of toilet paper supply in Hong Kong at the moment.

She says it all really!

More Stuff You Will Surely Find Useful!

10 Must Have Resources for a Trouble-Free Hong Kong Employment Visa Application

10 Must Have Resources for a Successful Hong Kong Permanent Residency Application

10 Must Have Resources for any Hong Kong Investment Visa Application

The Hong Kong Visa D-I-Y Kit – Get Yours Today!

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26

Jan 2020

Hong Kong Employment Visa – How to Go About Changing Employers & Managing the Immigration Implications

Posted by / in Employment Visas, Your Question Answered / No responses

First Published March 27, 2014

This question comes up all the time (and is actually answered on the home page of our Blog) but I am grateful for the opportunity to revisit it again now…

QUESTION

Hi, I’m currently working in Hong Kong with a valid working visa but have been offered a job with another company in Hong Kong.

My work visa expires in July 2014 and I must give one month’s notice with my current employer.

 How does it work in terms of obtaining a new work visa for the new employer– do I have to resubmit all of my uni/school certificates etc as I did the first time round?

Do I need to quit my current job and then apply for the new company or can the new company apply for me whilst I’m still working at my current job?

I am worried that if I quit my first job that my 2nd visa will get rejected and then I will be jobless.

Any help you can give would be greatly appreciated, thank you! 

More Stuff You May Find Useful or Interesting

Can the company you have just left contact immigration & make your visa expire immediately?

Is there such an animal as a ‘flexible working visa’ for Hong Kong?

Will my Hong Kong employment visa be compromised if I leave my job due to intolerable working conditions?

Can I use the impending expiry of my Hong Kong work visa as a way to force the early termination of my employment contract?

How can I prove to the Hong Kong Immigration Department my last day of work for my previous employer as part of my change of employment visa sponsorship application?

Does the Hong Kong employment visa change of sponsorship process expressly disclose to my new employer the reason for me leaving my previous job?

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13

Jan 2020

Has the Hong Kong Immigration Department Tightened Up On Applicants With Criminal Records Recently?

Posted by / in Employment Visas, Family Visas, Investment Visas, Long Stay & PR, Special Programmes, Visitor Visas, Your Question Answered / No responses

Update February 27, 2023

The question of criminal records and how they impact on Hong Kong visa applications keeps cropping up…

QUESTION

Hi, I have previously lived in Hong Kong, once as a student so obviously held a student visa and then a couple of years later working there so had an employment visa.

I’m a Canadian citizen and have a criminal record for theft dating back almost 20 years to my youth! I have no criminal convictions since this time.

With my previous student/employment visas in Hong Kong I don’t even remember being asked if I had criminal convictions.

However, I plan on returning to Hong Kong later this year to work again and am slightly worried immigration may have tightened up and may refuse me on this basis.

Guess my question is, will I be asked about criminal convictions in Canada?

And if I am will it prevent me from being granted an employment visa?

Also, will the fact that I’ve previously lived in Hong Kong twice and held visas there mean they might go easier when granting another? 

More Stuff You May Find Useful or Interesting

Can you have 2 separate Hong Kong visa applications pending at one time?

Hong Kong Travel Pass used to keep an extended family together, quite lawfully

STOP PRESS! Hitler’s HKSAR passport application has been denied

Can I expect to get a Hong Kong investment visa if all of our work is undertaken outside of Hong Kong?

How can I get  a visa & work legally in Hong Kong?

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07

Jan 2020

How Much & What Type of Work Experience Post-Graduation is Actually Needed to Get a Hong Kong Work Visa?

Posted by / in Employment Visas, Your Question Answered / No responses

First Published February 13, 2015

At least 2 years post-graduation working experience in a managerial or supervisory capacity is required to be deemed a Professional in order to qualify for a Hong Kong work visa under the General Employment Policy….

SMALL-keep-calm-and-ask-the-visa-geeza

Dear Visa Geeza,

Thank you for maintaining such an informative site! It has been a great help to me understanding where I stand. However, I am hoping you might be able to clarify something a little more about what it means to qualify as a professional under the General Employment Policy.

Namely, I want to get a better idea of how much the “relevant skills, knowledge, or experience” applies to the 2 years of post graduate experience, specifically.

Let me give you a bit of background for my current situation,

I graduated in the summer of 2012 from a well-known British university with a professional undergraduate degree.

I worked full-time afterwords for a year (summer 2012 – summer 2013), after which I was offered a job with a multi-national company in Hong Kong / China in July 2013, in a position that is exactly in-line with my undergraduate qualifications / major.

Initially, my company tried to apply for my work visa in Hong Kong. At that time both my employer and I were unaware of the two year post-graduation experience requirement, and I submitted to them both that I had graduated only one year ago, and that I only had one year of post graduate experience.

As should have been expected, I was denied an employment visa. After being denied, and appealing one time to be denied a second time. After then researching more, I discovered the two-year clause. At that time there was, obviously, nothing I could do about that. My company promptly helped me obtain a work visa in mainland china, and I began to work there in January of 2014.

It has now been a year working for my company in mainland China, and both they and I would like me to be relocated to the Hong Kong office, now that I theoretically have 2 years of post-graduate experience.

There is one catch however: that year of experience before my current employer, though what I would consider “professional” – solid post graduate education was required, and were also of “supervisory nature”, it however was not totally in-line with my major.

My real questions are as follows:

  1. How would the immigration officer consider my previous post-graduate experience, and how in-line does it need to be with my major and my current employer’s requirement? Especially considering that this is an intra-company transferee, and so my last year experience is especially relevant.
  2. It has been a year since my reconsideration was denied, and I also lost my passport since, meaning I have a different passport number now. what does this mean for the status of my previous file? Would it possibly considered as a new application or a reconsideration (as I know for the latter, it would take a more vigorous argument)?

If you could possibly be extra detailed on how post-graduate experience is evaluated in light of Employment as a Professional, I would be deeply appreciative!

Also, if I have specific skills that my employer values highly, can this take any weight off of my previous not-so-relevant experience?

Have I got a chance here?

More Stuff You May Find Useful or Interesting

If I didn’t graduate from university will it stop me from getting a Hong Kong work visa?

Is there a base salary for a Hong Kong  work visa?

100% Hong Kong visa application success rate? Take it all with a pinch of salt!

Do immigration consultants add any value to the Hong Kong visa and immigration process?

Social media keeping Hong Kong immigration consultants on their toes – scary stuff!

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28

Dec 2019

Waiting-in-the-Wings: The Typical Experience of a Foreign National Spouse in the Hong Kong Visa Application Process

Posted by / in 60 Second Snapshot, Family Visas, VG Front Page / 7 responses

First Published May 4, 2013

If you and your family are relocating to Hong Kong with your spouse’s job and he (or his employer) is responsible for organizing the visas for you and your children, what can you expect of the Hong Kong visa application process?

Firstly, the dependant visas which you and the children secure flow on naturally from your spouse’s principal employment visa. Just so long as you can show that you are legally married, the children are yours and that you have legal custody of any minors accompanying you from previous relationships, then it usually is all plan-sailing.

Your applications will be joined on the same form as your spouse’s. The two visa applications are then run together by the Hong Kong Immigration Department as a single application and are considered in tandem.

The over-arching requirements for approval of a dependent visa is for your spouse – as your sponsor – to be able to show that he can put a roof over your head and food on your table. This is typically and readily satisfied through the provision of a copy of the employment contract which is bringing you to Hong Kong in the first place.

The normal processing time is 4-6 weeks if your application is joined together with the employment visa application – and 6-10 weeks if applied for separately.

Once approved, both you and your children’s limit of stay will mirror exactly that of your spouse’s and (here’s the really good news) you are allowed to work, start or join in a business, study or – in fact – undertake any activity in Hong Kong as a dependant visa holder – with no further immigration permissions required (so long as its lawful needless to say!)

More Stuff to Help You Along

How is my dependant visa impacted under the Admission of Mainland Talents and Professionals Scheme  if my sponsor-father goes back to China to work?

Can I get a Hong Kong dependant visa for my Chinese spouse presently resident on the Mainland?

Am I eligible for an extension to my Hong Kong dependant visa  if my PHKID holding spouse doesn’t actually live here any more?

What are your visa options if your marriage in Hong Kong has irretrievably broken down?

Why public internet forums are a cr@p source of Hong Kong visa & immigration advice

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26

Dec 2019

When There Really is No Need to Spend Any Money With a Hong Kong Immigration Service Provider

Posted by / in 60 Second Snapshot, Employment Visas, Family Visas, Investment Visas, Long Stay & PR, Special Programmes, VG Front Page, Visitor Visas / 7 responses

First Published May 9, 2013

For many people, especially those with a natural ability to manage a process or work to a set of procedural guidelines, there may very well be no need to spend good money on securing the professional assistance of a Hong Kong immigration service provider.

Of course, if you prefer to instruct someone to just take care of it all for you, or you are happy to pay for the peace of mind knowing that your application is in a pair of expert hands, then that’s all good.

I am, after all, an Immigration Consultant myself and I truly understand the value that we add.

So, that all said, here follow five typical situations where you more than likely do not need to pay for any professional help with your Hong Kong visa application:

1.           Where you have read through the Hong Kong Visa Handbook  and our content on the Visa Geeza blog and it is manifestly evident that you have an approvable application situation in play.

2.            Where you are especially adept at paperwork and can easily follow the guidance and directions contained in the information found on our Hong Kong visa websites.

3.            Where you have plenty of time on your hands to understand what’s required for visa approval, can handle the process yourself down at Immigration Tower and are not afraid of the roller coaster experience of surprise calls from the Immigration Department and their sometimes inexplicable requests to resubmit documents which you have already supplied.

4.            Where perhaps you have a background in professional services and are confident that you can handle the process yourself so long as you have access to the type of information and help found in the Hong Kong Visa Handbook as well as this Blog.

5.            And, finally, where you’ve had the chance to speak to an Immigration Consultant first who has effectively confirmed for you that your case is, subject to following the correct application process, essentially approvable – just so long as you argue it properly.

 More Stuff to Help You Along

The foibles of Hong Kong visa and immigration applications that only experience can fully appreciate

But Stephen, how do you make any money when you give away all of your Hong Kong visa  expertise and know-how for free?

The newcomer’s guide to getting a Hong Kong employment visa

What’s required for a one man Hong Kong business investment visa approval?

How to engage the Hong Kong Visa Centre if your application has been refused by the Immigration Department

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24

Dec 2019

The Visa Geeza on RTHK Radio 3 – December, 2019

Posted by / in Employment Visas, Long Stay & PR, Musing / No responses

Well, it had been quite a while since I managed to get to speak to Phil Whelan over at RTHK Radio 3 and this time we did it, for the first time, from my home in Western Australia. We had lots to discuss and catch up on the given the shenanigans of this year and so you can listen to / watch the proceedings below:

Phil works real hard on his Morning Brew Facebook page which I recommend you check out and Like!

More Stuff You Might Find Useful or Interesting

What’s the minimum salary for a Hong Kong employment visa approval?

I’ve lost my job – will I get kicked out of Hong Kong?

Can I apply for a residence visa whilst I am visiting Hong Kong?

What are your visa options in Hong Kong if your marriage has irretrievably broken down?

The Hong Kong Immigration Department are out to deny – not approve – applications (aren’t they?)

 

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