| Lonely Planet™ · Thorn Tree Forum · 2020 | ![]() |
visaCountry forums / UK & Ireland / Ireland | ||
I am currently a student from USA studying in Poland. I was issued a 10 month visa instead of a full year and my student visa expires July 31. I am planning to travel to Ireland Aug 11 to study for 1 extra month. Can I stay in Europe for 3 months after my student visa expires? I know I am allowed 90 days to stay in Poland without a visa but will I be allowed to stay in Europe after July 31 or do I have to leave Europe and come back to Poland for the 90 days to start? Edited by: student729 Edited by: student729 | ||
You can stay in Ireland for three months after your student visa expires, provided you can satisfy airport immigration that you have sufficient funds for your stay and that you will indeed be going home at the end of the three months (a return ticket to the US is essential). Other European countries and those that are part of the Schengen zone will have different rules. There isn't a single Europe-wide visa policy. | 1 | |
Best thing to do is to contact your Embassy/consulate. Most likely you have a schengen-zone visa, which includes Poland but not Ireland (or the UK). You should have no problems entering Ireland (presuming you are US-citizen), but you could have problems leaving and re-entering the schengen area if you outstayed your visa. By the way, i have never heard of the requirement to have a return ticket to the US to enter Ireland. | 2 | |
Do a Google search on Americans refused entry at Dublin Airport for not having a return ticket... you're sure to get a number of hits. | 3 | |
Do a Google search on people being abducted by aliens and you get many more: If you have a legitimate reason not to have a return ticket (eg studying in Poland) i doubt you will need one. | 4 | |
I take it you didn't do that search, then. Well if OP wants to try to enter Ireland with no (unexpired) visa to return to another country and no return ticket back to the US, that is up to OP. Hopefully s/he won't be foolish enough to assume s/he won't need one just because someone on an internet forum, whose nationality means he has no need for one himself, hasn't ever heard of other people needing them. | 5 | |
Again: The OP needs to contact his/her Embassy/Consulate (and the Irish one in Poland) to sort out this complicated visa issue (which i have been saying in my initial post), and not listen to any advice given on this forum (by me or anyone else). | 6 | |
If you have pre-paid for your Ireland studies AND you have a ticket back to the States to show any immigration people who ask, you should be fine. | 7 | |