Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - How to immigrate to Norway?

How to immigrate to Norway?

You can ask your boyfriend to check the marriage immigration regulations on udi website to see if he is qualified to be a guarantor. Now, not only one spouse is a Norwegian citizen or has the right of abode in Norway, but also has financial ability.

Your question above 1, 2, 3, etc. If he meets the requirements, he should be given priority.

If he meets the requirements of the guarantor, then you can marry him and then apply for family reunion and immigrate to Norway. Generally, qualified visas are issued once a year. The immigrant visa is a work visa, a three-year long-term residence and a seven-year passport. When you arrive in Norway, you will be asked to read Norwegian, which is free, but you can't afford it. Maybe some students in your class have money while taking Norwegian classes, and you look at it and think, why can't you take it? The reason is very simple, because you are an immigrant, and immigrants bear all the economic expenses themselves. All the people who take money to study are refugees. You can apply for a student loan to subsidize your family when you are studying, but you have to pay it back. If your husband can afford it, then you can study wholeheartedly.

As long as you get a visa from the immigration office, you can have slogans when you arrive in Norway, and you can enjoy all the benefits enjoyed by Norwegians with slogans. For example, hospitalization does not pay, pregnant doctors do not pay, and children do not pay for medical treatment. Wait a minute. . . You can check the questions I answered about Norway before. There are many questions about welfare.

If your boyfriend is just a student and doesn't have enough financial resources, I advise you to wait and not get married. You should not only know that Norway has good welfare, but also know that Norway has a high standard of living, right? What kind of life will you live even if you come to Norway through an immigrant visa? Although Norway has good welfare, it is not so easy to enjoy these benefits. Except that hospitals can get a lot of free living allowances according to the population, other living allowances need to be reviewed repeatedly, not many. Maybe you can have a house to live in, but you can't freeze it, but you have to count crowns to eat every day and you have to look at people's faces. To put it bluntly, is it really unlucky when you need a free hospital? (except for having children! )

In short, find out your Norwegian boyfriend's financial situation, and you can apply for more than 220,000 a year. Do you have a house? You can rent it. Do you live with your parents? How many student loans do you have? Are there any other debts? How much money is left after the monthly loan rent is paid off, and how much he spends on meals every month.

Let me give you a comparison. Take a family with two couples and one child as an example. The living allowance that the state can give is less than 9000 kronor per month, and the electricity fee is calculated separately. If you have a little income, such as 3,000 yuan a month, and the student loan is also considered income, then the state will only give you 6,000 yuan. Anyway, it does not exceed this amount. And a family of three, telephone charges, internet access fees, meals and so on, 9000 is very tight. If the family's monthly income is 6.5438+0 million, then you can't apply for any subsidy. Maybe I can get a kindergarten subsidy for a while occasionally, but life is very hard.

A Norwegian family is well-off if its monthly after-tax income is 30,000 pounds. You can have money to buy a car, buy a house and save some.

Look at your boyfriend's monthly salary. Wait and see.

Good luck!