I waned to share my experiences, I'm from DRCongo but I'm living in South africa. To get a birth certificate in my country I paid 180$, to get a police clearance I paid 150$, here in South Africa to get a police clearance I paid 5,9$ and marriage certificate is 7$. For medical test they are asking for 250$. It is not cheap to get a green card even if it is a lottery.
I waned to share my experiences, I'm from DRCongo but I'm living in South africa. To get a birth certificate in my country I paid 180$, to get a police clearance I paid 150$, here in South Africa to get a police clearance I paid 5,9$ and marriage certificate is 7$. For medical test they are asking for 250$. It is not cheap to get a green card even if it is a lottery.
Hi, just wanna ask u please dani did u get selected your self or is it your wife ? Thanks
We are on the same boat hehe. I guess u suscribed her hey?My wife was selected and we have two kids.
Hi,
I'm Japanese.
I have spent as follows.
Birth & Marriage certificate $4 for all family member. (I made a translation myself)
Police report for free
Medical Exam $380 ($265/minimum + vaccination and/or antibody test)/person
I think not so expensive.
IN ETHIOPIA
Medical- $ 57
Passport= $ 15
Birth Certificate= $ 3.8
Police Certificate= $ 0.5
It's cheap over here as well.
I'm in Bulgaria. Here there is no need to translate the docs. Just the originals in Bulgarian + a copy of each one.
In every consulate they should accept documents in English OR the local official language. So if someone had documents in French and they had their interview in Bulgaria they WOULD need the translations.
There are a couple that require translations into English - stated in embassy specific requirements - this is rare though, and as you say local language documents are usually fine.
Yep agreed.
Oh, I see. I didn't mind that. What about these bank statements. In Bulgaria there is no need to show any prooves for how much money do you have. Is this specific only for us?
In Venezuela, you need all documents translated into english. And the copies. No local official language here.There are a couple that require translations into English - stated in embassy specific requirements - this is rare though, and as you say local language documents are usually fine.
In Venezuela, you need all documents translated into english. And the copies. No local official language here.