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naturegirl321

Joined: 18 Jul 2006 Location: Home sweet home
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 4:50 am Post subject: Visaless renewal is a bad idea |
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I left to go on vacation yesterday. I had renewed my visa until Feb 2012. Luckily I was able to renew farther in advance than the usual 90 days.
I went to the counter to check in and they asked if I was coming back. I told them they was. They looked through my passport and told me I couldn-t since my visa was expired. I said, I know, but my ARC is valid for another 14 months.
She looked at me with pity and explained again, slowly, like I was stupid. That my visa was expired. I told her that it doesn-t matter since my ARC is valid. She said they were different. (Duh! Your ARC is what counts!)
So she sent me to immigration. I went and they told me I was correct, Obvioulsy. BUt that wasn-t the issue. The issue is that poeple in Incheon airport don-t even understand about the new visaless renewal, so how can we expect people in foreign countries to know about it ?!
I can just imagine trying to get back to Korea and having them not believe me that the small written in remark on the back of my ARC substitutes for a visa. And either not letting me on the flight or having me by a return.
I don-t know if anyone else has had this issue, but I really hope they go back to putting stuff in our passport.
And to boot, all we need is for someone to keep their ARC, write on the back, go to KOrea only for kimmi to send him back at the airline's expense. Maybe then they'll put the visas back in our passport. |
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lifeinkorea
Joined: 24 Jan 2009 Location: somewhere in China
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 5:22 am Post subject: |
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If I am not mistaken, your first visa is usually a single entry visa unless you specifically change it to multiple. So, wouldn't it make more sense on our end to get that multiple entry visa if we are going to renew? Then, it will be added in the passport.
In Japan, I would go to the post office each year and buy an orange $40 stamp. Then I would take it to the immigration office, and they would type "extension" with the time period on it. It didn't look like the first visa I got (same look as the Chinese one), just an bigger stamp than one you would use for snail mail. And the good thing, it doesn't cover the whole page like the visas do. You could put 4 on one page (5 years total). |
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naturegirl321

Joined: 18 Jul 2006 Location: Home sweet home
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 11:54 am Post subject: |
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| lifeinkorea wrote: |
| If I am not mistaken, your first visa is usually a single entry visa unless you specifically change it to multiple. So, wouldn't it make more sense on our end to get that multiple entry visa if we are going to renew? Then, it will be added in the passport. |
Not for Americans. Mine were both multiple entry. The one I got back in 2007 and the one I got in 2010.
They used to put half page green stamps in. Now we have nothing. I still think it-s a bad idea. They should go back to the old way of doing things. |
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Zeeto
Joined: 12 May 2009
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 1:41 pm Post subject: |
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| Leaving Incheon after a contract was finished, when I had been to immigration and gotten my 30-day visa extension, both the airline check-in and the immigration guy told me I had over-stayed my visa. I was able to convince them otherwise, but it was still a little annoying. |
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sojukettle
Joined: 23 Aug 2005 Location: Not there, HERE!
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 2:58 pm Post subject: |
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I renewed my contract in Dec and was concerned that there was no stamp / label placed in my passport so I asked if they could do that and after another 5min wait the Immigration staff printed out a label with the ending date on and stuck it in my passport.
( they also automatically added one month to the visa term so that I have one month after contract completion to leave Korea)
sk. |
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tanklor1
Joined: 13 Jun 2006
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 4:40 pm Post subject: |
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| Had an American friend who went through this last year. He was on his second contract and wanted to take a faerie to Japan. He was stopped in Busan because he didn't have a re-entry permit. He politely mentioned that he did and pointed at his initial visa. The immigration officer stated that that particular visa was only good for one year and he had to get a re-entry permit. They gave it to him at the border and he went about his merry way. |
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ttompatz

Joined: 05 Sep 2005 Location: Kwangju, South Korea
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 5:05 pm Post subject: |
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| tanklor1 wrote: |
| Had an American friend who went through this last year. He was on his second contract and wanted to take a faerie to Japan. He was stopped in Busan because he didn't have a re-entry permit. He politely mentioned that he did and pointed at his initial visa. The immigration officer stated that that particular visa was only good for one year and he had to get a re-entry permit. They gave it to him at the border and he went about his merry way. |
Yes, but last year you needed a re-entry permit and re-entry privilages did not carry over from a multi-entry visa into an extension of sojourn.
As of December 1 a re-entry permit/multi-entry visa are NO LONGER REQUIRED for registered foreigners. Your ARC is your proof of residence and re-entry card.
The problem, as outlined in the OP, is that the people who enforce it (check-in staff at the airports) are NOT aware of the change and this CAN cause problems when trying to leave (as in the OP) or when trying to return (check-in staff won't know that you are entitled to return and may insist that you meet the visa waiver requirements as a tourist (meaning onward passage out of Korea). They are expecting something in your passport that says you are entitled to return to Korea as a resident.
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tanklor1
Joined: 13 Jun 2006
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 5:19 pm Post subject: |
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| ttompatz wrote: |
| tanklor1 wrote: |
| Had an American friend who went through this last year. He was on his second contract and wanted to take a faerie to Japan. He was stopped in Busan because he didn't have a re-entry permit. He politely mentioned that he did and pointed at his initial visa. The immigration officer stated that that particular visa was only good for one year and he had to get a re-entry permit. They gave it to him at the border and he went about his merry way. |
Yes, but last year you needed a re-entry permit and re-entry privilages did not carry over from a multi-entry visa into an extension of sojourn.
As of December 1 a re-entry permit/multi-entry visa are NO LONGER REQUIRED for registered foreigners. Your ARC is your proof of residence and re-entry card.
The problem, as outlined in the OP, is that the people who enforce it (check-in staff at the airports) are NOT aware of the change and this CAN cause problems when trying to leave (as in the OP) or when trying to return (check-in staff won't know that you are entitled to return and may insist that you meet the visa waiver requirements as a tourist (meaning onward passage out of Korea). They are expecting something in your passport that says you are entitled to return to Korea as a resident.
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Does this apply to Canadians as well? |
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OculisOrbis

Joined: 17 Jul 2006
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 6:50 pm Post subject: |
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| yes. |
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tanklor1
Joined: 13 Jun 2006
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Posted: Wed Jan 05, 2011 6:56 pm Post subject: |
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