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pooroldedgar
Joined: 07 Oct 2010 Posts: 181
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Posted: Sun Mar 06, 2016 1:12 am Post subject: Getting a tourist visa at NYC consulate. |
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I have been trying to get an approval letter for a visa on arrival but apparently my card won't work in Vietnam. So I'm going to try to go to the NYC consulate and get a tourist visa. Ideally, it will work like this: I arrive in the morning, pay a reasonable (ie under 200 bucks) and leave that day with a 3 month (6??) tourist visa already stamped into my passport.
Has anyone gotten their visa this way? Is what I described possible? Reading online, it actually looks like the consulate is a helpful, efficient place. |
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sigmoid
Joined: 21 Jan 2003 Posts: 1276
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Posted: Sun Mar 06, 2016 3:42 am Post subject: |
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In my experience at the VN embassy in Vientiane, Lao PDR, bring a photo and $70 to get a 3-month tourist visa back the next day in the evening about 5:30 pm. They also give the option of paying $65 for 2 working days and $60 for 3.
You have to specify the date of arrival and you can't enter before that date. It's printed on the visa, which is a full-page sicker. The validity of the visa also starts from that date whether you have entered the country or not.
If you're there in the morning, maybe you can get it back the same day. I've always gone in the afternoon.
Of course, what they do in NYC may be completely different. Anyway, if that's the one nearest you, then go there. |
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LettersAthruZ
Joined: 25 Apr 2010 Posts: 466 Location: North Viet Nam
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Posted: Sun Mar 13, 2016 5:55 am Post subject: |
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You'd really best have a speak with the financial institution that issued your credit card. I remember when I had resided in The States, there were many banks as well as credit unions that blocked transactions from Viet Nam and several other nations (especially Thailand, for some reason) as well. Request that your financial institution remove the block on Vietnamese transactions.
The visa-on-arrival had been very reasonable when I had resided in Viet Nam (*THINK* it was a forty dollar USD service charge to the agent and a $25USD "stamp fee" in cash at the counter - this was, perhaps, four years ago), and when I had attempted to obtain a tourist visa for a visit at the Consulate in San Francisco, it was almost $200+ for three months!!!!!!
Basically, in Lao and Campuchia, the Viet embassies and consulates are reasonable with their Visa fees.....in DEVELOPED nations, however, they really tend to gouge you. |
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TRH
Joined: 27 Oct 2011 Posts: 340 Location: Hawaii
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Posted: Wed Mar 16, 2016 8:01 pm Post subject: Re: Getting a tourist visa at NYC consulate. |
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pooroldedgar wrote: |
Reading online, it actually looks like the consulate is a helpful, efficient place. |
I would be curious where you read this as my own experience, as well as what I have subsequently read online, is that the Viet embassy and consulates are highly uncooperative. In my case the embassy did not translate documents that they certified, so I had to do them again in HCMC. My telephone contacts with them were with people who spoke brusquely and provided little or no help. Maybe NY is the exception. I hope you do better.
A to Z is correct about the bank. Just call them and explain that you need a foreign transaction clearance. Some banks will block all foreign transactions particularly online ones but will lift the block if you ask. Be aware that lifting the block may have an expiration date, so you should clarify that as well. Another thing to check is does your card/bank have a foreign transaction fee. This is a fee above and beyond what they may gouge you on conversion rates. Capitol 1 is the only US bank I know that has no such fee on any of their cards. Other banks may have only a few cards without these fees. You may want to convert your card before you leave. Generally in Vietnam, credit cards are only used for big ticket items like airline tickets or appliances. |
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