Anonymous
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Log in
Request account
Rest of What I Know
Search
Editing
Blog/2024-09-03/Getting A French Visa
From Rest of What I Know
Namespaces
Page
Discussion
More
More
Page actions
Read
Edit
History
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
Since I'm an Indian citizen, getting a visa is a common activity for me. Going practically anywhere is an exercise in paperwork. Some places are easy, like Hong Kong (which just needs an instant online application), some places are easy if you've got a US visa (like most of South America), and some places are hard (like the [[wikipedia:Schengen Area|Schengen zone]]). For much of my life I've had a Schengen visa since either my parents applied for me to visit as a child or because I've had to go there for work, and it's never ceased to be a huge pain. The best experience is trying to get into France. The worst experience is trying to get into Norway - where they propose that you book all your flights but emphasize that you should not pay for them until you've got the visa (which requires a confirmation of your flights). Anyway, I never did get that visa to Norway (which I intended to also use to go to Croatia for my friend's bachelorette) since I requested my passport back so I could go to a wedding. Schengen visas are hard to get because [https://www.vfsglobal.com/en/individuals/index.html the contractor they've hired] to run it has a limited number of appointment slots. Today, I found out why. # The ticketing system would print tickets but it wouldn't call them out # Agents would call out via some auction-like system ("What's your ticket number? 34? Does anyone have lower than 34?") # Verifying that your application is valid is pretty slow The process for the French visa is much simpler than for the esoteric countries in Schengen. # If you've forgotten a document they'll print it for you there # There is a pretty short checklist on the France Visas site on what you need While I was sitting there, a guy who was clearly IT was talking to someone who must have been the boss and explaining that "V1 wasn't working" or something like that. Eventually, they did actually get the ticketing system functional and after a little longer they got it to actually display to us and call out numbers (though the first few were wrong). For the most part it was quite easy, and the location had Internet and did not prohibit cell phones so it was possible to book a hotel for one day that I didn't have covered. One amusingly embarrassing part was that when I was called for my biometrics I repeatedly pulled hard on a door that I later found was locked and would be unlocked a few seconds later. But in the end, it took about as long as I expected a visa appointment to take. {| class="wikitable" |+ Timeline |- ! Time !! Event |- | 1029 || I arrived at VFS |- | 1035 || I received my number |- | 1045 || My appointment time |- | 1150 || I was called up to a counter |- | 1215 || I finished at the counter |- | 1225 || I was called up to biometrics |- | 1236 || I left VFS |} There were a few strange details about the place. The elevators were labelled with a sign that said "Only 2 people in an elevator at a time" on one and "Only 1 person in the elevator at a time" on the other. The elevators themselves were large and could have held 10+ and indeed 4 others got in with me on the max-2 one. There was a metal detector which fired since I had my laptop in my bag but it was completely ignored. The whole place seemed a bit haphazard. One of the HVAC vents was in front of a hanging lamp and caused the lamp to oscillate continuously. There was a false ceiling over one corner of the space where sprinklers and a security camera were installed. The token system seemed to be running on Windows with the displays being dumb monitors (they all changed in lockstep). Overall, this wasn't as nice as applying for a French visa in the UK (which is much nicer and faster) but it was definitely orders of magnitude better than applying for one to Norway. == Timeline After Submission == {| class="wikitable" |+ Timeline |- ! Time !! Event |- | Sep 3 || VFS Appointment |- | Sep 9 || VFS reports package arrival at Washington Operation Center |- | Sep 9 || VFS reports dispatch to Embassy of France |- | Sep 9 || VFS reports under processing at Embassy of France |- | Sep 12 || VFS reports package in transit from Embassy of France |- | Sep 12 || VFS reports receipt at Washington Operation Center |- | Sep 12 || VFS reports package dispatched to me |- | Sep 13 || Package recorded at my building front desk |} Since the VFS reports are minutes from each other, I think they are all processed in batch and do not represent a true time log. However, I did receive my visa within 10 days of application. It was a multiple entry visa for 3 months. [[Category:Blog]]
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Rest of What I Know are considered to be released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (see
Rest of What I Know:Copyrights
for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource.
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Navigation
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Wiki tools
Wiki tools
Special pages
Page tools
Page tools
User page tools
More
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Page logs