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Moving to Poland - when to talk to an immigration attorney?


safeladie25  1 | 1
2 days ago   #1
My family and I are moving to Poland within 3 yrs and we were wondering when would be a good time to talk with an immigration attorney for a consultation? Any serious advice would be grateful.
Tlum  12 | 421
2 days ago   #2
If I was an attorney, I'd ask you to specify your time frame. 0-3 years is a long bracket. What would you like to talk about - if you plan to permanently move to Poland, it would help that you have Polish roots; do you have a Polish passport or ancestors from Poland?

So in general, you need to know when you want to make it happen. I guess a good ball park figure would be to allow a year to arrange things; 3 years is too far away.
OP safeladie25  1 | 1
1 day ago   #3
thank you for replying and do appreciate the message. However, we are not for sure on the polish ancestors. Yes we have been doing ancestry.com, came up with possible ancestors and no we don't have a polish passport. What if we just want to move to Poland to experience a new life style. Is that so bad? We gave ourselves till 2028 to make sure not only to have enough funds to sustain our living there but to make sure we sell our house, do things we need to do here first. I get what you are saying though but I do realize and seen where a lot of visa applications can take 6 to 18 months be to be processed.
jon357  74 | 24992
18 hrs ago   #4
Yes we have been doing ancestry.com, came up with possible ancestors

It needs to be closer than distsnt ancestors that and there are strict conditions.

You can come for several months without a visa, however any longer and there bneeds to be a reason.

If you gave a skill that is needed and the employer has grounds to ewcruit abroad. why not look for work in PL? You may find something suitable, especially if you speak Polish well.

Which country are you from? If it's an EU member state (including French/Dutch overseas territories in the Caribbean and French territories next to Africa and in the South Pacific), you have a right to settle in PL, and if you're from certain other countries like India, it's often possible to get a fixed term visa and work permit if you have certain skills.

It's a nice place to live. Have you spent much time in PL, and what did you think of lifw in Poland?


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