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one-way ticket

 
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donfan



Joined: 31 Aug 2003
Posts: 217

PostPosted: Thu Dec 11, 2003 11:22 pm    Post subject: one-way ticket Reply with quote

I am returning to Taiwan in January. I am thinking of just getting a one-way ticket. My Dad is a travel agent so he can give me a return itinerary. I did this the first time I went to Taiwan. I was asked a few questions at the airport in Australia but had no problems at CKS. Do you think it is risky to only get a one-way?
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Aristotle



Joined: 16 Jan 2003
Posts: 1388
Location: Taiwan

PostPosted: Fri Dec 12, 2003 4:17 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you are white, unemployed and smile a lot I don't think you will have any problems as a tourist.
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brian



Joined: 15 May 2003
Posts: 299

PostPosted: Fri Dec 12, 2003 12:14 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Have a read of some of the recent discussion on this board. I am sure that this will more than adequately answer your question.

In summary:

1. As you have seen, you can arrive here on a one way, but it is against the system, hence the questions that you encountered.
2. Both airlines and Taiwan immigration have policies regarding this matter and therefore it is possible that you could meet with strife and inconvenience if you try to arrive without the proper documentation. Then again you may just breeze right through. The only guarantee for a trouble free arrival is to comply with the regulations.
3. You will have to buy a return some time,why not save some money and buy it upfront.

The rest is up to you as it really is a personal decision.
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donfan



Joined: 31 Aug 2003
Posts: 217

PostPosted: Sat Dec 13, 2003 2:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

thanks for your replies guys - cheers Smile
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tweed



Joined: 21 Nov 2003
Posts: 11
Location: Taiwan

PostPosted: Sat Dec 13, 2003 10:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hey,
From a Canadian perspective, which perhaps differs from your own, the major stipulation for a visa was having an exit from Taiwan. Personally I had a one way ticket to Taiwan then a one way ticket to Hong Kong because I knew I would not be leaving Taiwan in less than a year, which is the maximun of a round trip ticket. At the visa office I was asked why I did not have a return ticket from Hong kong and I replied that it ws cheaper to purchase a return ticket there. Just my thoughts, dunno if they help.
-T
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jason_seeburn



Joined: 26 Apr 2003
Posts: 399
Location: Toronto

PostPosted: Sun Dec 14, 2003 7:38 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

tweed wrote:
Hey,
From a Canadian perspective, which perhaps differs from your own, the major stipulation for a visa was having an exit from Taiwan. Personally I had a one way ticket to Taiwan then a one way ticket to Hong Kong because I knew I would not be leaving Taiwan in less than a year, which is the maximun of a round trip ticket. At the visa office I was asked why I did not have a return ticket from Hong kong and I replied that it ws cheaper to purchase a return ticket there. Just my thoughts, dunno if they help.
-T


I did the same with the same results. They don't care at all.
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brian



Joined: 15 May 2003
Posts: 299

PostPosted: Mon Dec 15, 2003 12:12 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Now be honest Jason. Don�t twist the facts again.

You did not arrive in Taiwan on a one-way ticket, with an ongoing ticket to Hong Kong. By your own account you arrived here on a one way, with no ongoing ticket.

Through our discussions on this board this has been shown to be against the regulations of both Taiwan immigration and the airlines that carry us, and a rather unpredictable way of arriving in Taiwan.

Under the regulations that I posted a link to earlier, as well as the reference that I made to the experiences of others here in Taiwan, arriving here with an onward ticket to Hong Kong is the best way of having a trouble free entry if you do not want to buy a return ticket form your original departure destination. You can then choose to use this onward ticket for your mandatory visa run once you have secured a job, or you can cash it in (in which case I believe you will lose a little bit of money).

I believe that buying a return is the best way to go unless you have a real aversion to this.
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jason_seeburn



Joined: 26 Apr 2003
Posts: 399
Location: Toronto

PostPosted: Mon Dec 15, 2003 8:07 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

brian wrote:
Now be honest Jason. Don�t twist the facts again.

You did not arrive in Taiwan on a one-way ticket, with an ongoing ticket to Hong Kong. By your own account you arrived here on a one way, with no ongoing ticket.

Through our discussions on this board this has been shown to be against the regulations of both Taiwan immigration and the airlines that carry us, and a rather unpredictable way of arriving in Taiwan.

Under the regulations that I posted a link to earlier, as well as the reference that I made to the experiences of others here in Taiwan, arriving here with an onward ticket to Hong Kong is the best way of having a trouble free entry if you do not want to buy a return ticket form your original departure destination. You can then choose to use this onward ticket for your mandatory visa run once you have secured a job, or you can cash it in (in which case I believe you will lose a little bit of money).

I believe that buying a return is the best way to go unless you have a real aversion to this.


They never check, and no one cares.
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Pop Fly



Joined: 15 Feb 2003
Posts: 429

PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2003 2:48 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

jason_seeburn wrote:
brian wrote:
Now be honest Jason. Don�t twist the facts again.

You did not arrive in Taiwan on a one-way ticket, with an ongoing ticket to Hong Kong. By your own account you arrived here on a one way, with no ongoing ticket.

Through our discussions on this board this has been shown to be against the regulations of both Taiwan immigration and the airlines that carry us, and a rather unpredictable way of arriving in Taiwan.

Under the regulations that I posted a link to earlier, as well as the reference that I made to the experiences of others here in Taiwan, arriving here with an onward ticket to Hong Kong is the best way of having a trouble free entry if you do not want to buy a return ticket form your original departure destination. You can then choose to use this onward ticket for your mandatory visa run once you have secured a job, or you can cash it in (in which case I believe you will lose a little bit of money).

I believe that buying a return is the best way to go unless you have a real aversion to this.


They never check, and no one cares.


Once again, they "never" checked Jason, his one time thru CKS.

I have been here three times....twice checked, once not. The one time I wasn't checked was during SARS.

What no one cares about is this beating of a dead horse Jason.

We do care what the hosts of our adopted country are saying to us when we walk in to a McD's, a Starbucks, a 7-11, a Giordano or a 5 star hotel. They say Wan Ing Gwa Ling....it's really quite sweet.

And border guards and ticket counter personnel do care about keeping their jobs. Brian has labouriously posted the rules and regs about entering Taiwan. Do you think the average Taiwanese would risk his or her job just to gain the face of letting a "you are so-handsome" big nose such as yourself into the country? Do you? Do you really?

Now, here is some practical advice for crossing the border here. Speak some Taiwanese to every official you meet. A simple, well timed "PieSe" opens many a door. And no Jason, we are not going to translate "PieSe" for you. You are such a fountain of knowledge that you can surely tell everyone else what this means, right? Right? I'm right, right?
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brian



Joined: 15 May 2003
Posts: 299

PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2003 3:31 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

jason_seeburn wrote:
They never check, and no one cares.


They did check � and he most certainly does care!

alamuerte wrote:
not joining the "debate" just giving my experience.
- departed toronto nov. 16 with a return seat booked for oct 20 2004
- was told at check-in that since my visa was for 30 days my
return seat had to booked for within that window.
- changed the reservation for dec. 13, the latest they had availability
for the 30 days. ( cost to make change $25 can.)
- haven't done it yet but will now have to change the reservation again,
probably for the hong kong visa run, but that's another story.
(been told that because i have a 30 day landing visa instead of a
30 day visistor visa i can't do the star cruise trip).


Get over it Jason!
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jason_seeburn



Joined: 26 Apr 2003
Posts: 399
Location: Toronto

PostPosted: Tue Dec 16, 2003 7:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Pop Fly wrote:
jason_seeburn wrote:
brian wrote:
Now be honest Jason. Don�t twist the facts again.

You did not arrive in Taiwan on a one-way ticket, with an ongoing ticket to Hong Kong. By your own account you arrived here on a one way, with no ongoing ticket.

Through our discussions on this board this has been shown to be against the regulations of both Taiwan immigration and the airlines that carry us, and a rather unpredictable way of arriving in Taiwan.

Under the regulations that I posted a link to earlier, as well as the reference that I made to the experiences of others here in Taiwan, arriving here with an onward ticket to Hong Kong is the best way of having a trouble free entry if you do not want to buy a return ticket form your original departure destination. You can then choose to use this onward ticket for your mandatory visa run once you have secured a job, or you can cash it in (in which case I believe you will lose a little bit of money).

I believe that buying a return is the best way to go unless you have a real aversion to this.


They never check, and no one cares.


Once again, they "never" checked Jason, his one time thru CKS.

I have been here three times....twice checked, once not. The one time I wasn't checked was during SARS.

What no one cares about is this beating of a dead horse Jason.

We do care what the hosts of our adopted country are saying to us when we walk in to a McD's, a Starbucks, a 7-11, a Giordano or a 5 star hotel. They say Wan Ing Gwa Ling....it's really quite sweet.

And border guards and ticket counter personnel do care about keeping their jobs. Brian has labouriously posted the rules and regs about entering Taiwan. Do you think the average Taiwanese would risk his or her job just to gain the face of letting a "you are so-handsome" big nose such as yourself into the country? Do you? Do you really?

Now, here is some practical advice for crossing the border here. Speak some Taiwanese to every official you meet. A simple, well timed "PieSe" opens many a door. And no Jason, we are not going to translate "PieSe" for you. You are such a fountain of knowledge that you can surely tell everyone else what this means, right? Right? I'm right, right?


Sure, you are telling me that taiwanese officials care now? So that when the police stop you for running a red light, and you politely tell them where to go, and they laugh and smile at you and get back in their police cars, you are telling me that these people really care what you do? They used to leave dead bodies lying on the roads for days after scooter accidents. They cared about nothing. You could toast them on your way to the bar, with the mickey you were holding (and drinking) while riding your motorbike there, and they would wave back. Nobody cared about anything. Oh, and, unlike you, I am not a dork, so I don't run around saying polite things to people that I don't know, because I don't know them, and i have no reason to be polite to them. This sort of activity doesn't excite me. But for you, obviously.... You seem to get lost in the insignificant details and you don't notice the important things.
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balrog



Joined: 17 Jun 2003
Posts: 23

PostPosted: Wed Dec 17, 2003 1:14 am    Post subject: niet problem Reply with quote

2 days ago it wasn't a problem.
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alamuerte



Joined: 06 Aug 2003
Posts: 21
Location: tongshih,taichung county

PostPosted: Sun Dec 28, 2003 2:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

see my update:
"to andy in taiwan" this date
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