Guys I was send an email from Thai embassy regarding my e-visa for additional documents for previous travel history and I haven’t travelled out of my country before so I sent a letter do you think my visa will be accepted since I haven’t traveled out before
544
views
2
likes
13
all likes
9
replies
0
images
6
users
TLDR : Answer Summary
The user is seeking advice on the likelihood of their e-visa application being accepted despite having no travel history outside their country. Comments suggest providing a government-issued letter confirming no prior travel, submitting a signed letter stating the user has never traveled abroad, and including a complete photocopy of the passport to support the application. Several respondents express that a lack of international travel history should not inherently lead to rejection, emphasizing the importance of other submitted documents.
Take a photo of every page of your passport (including empty pages) and combine into 1 PDF. This will prove you haven’t been anywhere with no stamps. Ensure to take a photo of every page
Anonymous ******************
To answer your question, I highly doubt your visa application will be rejected ONLY because you have never been outside of your home country.
I'm Cameroonian (from Cameroon/Africa) and I know people who have obtained long-term visas to the US, France, Switzerland, etc. despite the fact that they had never been outside of the country.
It all depends on the other documents you sent. Good luck ✌🏾
Clara *****************
ORIGINAL POSTER
Anonymous participant 654 thanks
Reply to
Clara *****************
Reply
Wannikea *********
When was your current passport issued, is it your first passport? Pictures of every page in your current passport and combine into a single PDF file. A letter signed by you stating you have never traveled abroad.
what about all the previous passports the person might have ever had?
Reply to
Elías ****************
Reply
Elías ********
To prove that you don't normally write a letter yourself, but give them a government-issued paper (normally from the department of Migration/Immigration/Foreing Affairs/Police, depending on the country) that shows your official exit and entry records. If you have none, they just normally write it as so, in one line: "No records".