Does UK visa refusal affect my Schengen visa application
I applied for UK visa back in 2016 when I was doing my training and was taking stipend with not enough funds. now I am in an active job for the last 5 years with enough funds.
Now I am applying for Schengen visa. do we have to disclose UK visa refusal while applying for Schengen visa? as they have asked only about previous Schengen refusals and not about any UK refusals.
Best Answer
When applying for visa, you should answer truthfully all the questions asked of you.
On the other hand, you are not obligated to answer questions that are not asked. The UK is not (and has never been) a Schengen member.
Thus, if the question asks about prior Schengen refusal, then the answer is "No."
Pictures about "Does UK visa refusal affect my Schengen visa application"
Does UK visa refusal affect Schengen visa?
No , It will not effect other countries visa. The UK embassy doesn't put any stamp on passport for refusal. They just provide a letter with rejection reason.What happens if UK visa is rejected?
Re-Applying for UK Visa After Rejection Once an applicants visa application has been rejected, the applicant can choose to re-apply for a visa. A fresh application can be filed as soon as the first visa application was rejected, or on completion of the appeal process.Can I apply Schengen visa after rejection?
A common question newly rejected individuals and couples ask is \u201cCan we apply for a Schengen visa again after rejection?\u201d The answer to this question is always yes. Therefore, instead of appealing your rejected Schengen visa (or if your appeal fails), you could simply apply for a new Schengen visa.Do embassies know about visa refusal in other countries?
The embassy doesn't track your refusal, CLASS does. That's a database accessible to every American consular officer in the world at the click of a mouse, so it's not just the embassy where the visa refusal takes place.Reasons why my schengen visa was denied
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Nataliya Vaitkevich, Pixabay, Porapak Apichodilok, Karolina Grabowska