To prepare the immigration application in Austria, you must confirm your immigration application qualification and the benefits you can enjoy. It is recommended that you carefully understand.
Here’s a look at Austria’s immigration requirements and welfare policies.
Immigration requirements if you sign the contract in April, it will have to wait until next year to begin to apply, start to apply after the time, it will take about six months to get the card, so the processing cycle is six months, of course, there are some luck, or their own time control is better, in the middle of May can get the card.
If it is slow or the timing is not well controlled, the card will be available by mid-July.
But the advantage is that when the application is approved or not, you can already determine whether or not it has been successfully handled.
In the end, I just went to get the card and there was nothing to worry about.
Austrian quota immigration conditions, relatively simple (maybe for some people may be relatively simple, but for some people a little difficult), we just relative to the United States, Canada and Australia new these investment requirements and applicants for the conditions.
The requirements of Austrian applicants are not high, let alone high investment.
Only a college degree or above is required, and a one-line deposit equivalent to 450, 000 euros, with a term of six months.
What’s more, Austria is also very humane. The government also knows that not everyone can do well in school. Therefore, if you can’t get the degree, you may meet the application conditions as long as you are willing to study hard.
And the government also looks at language proficiency in this category during a five-year permanent residence.
Because language is a tool, a tool for human communication.
If you have a perfect language level, it will be easier to integrate into the local life. No matter in the future work or life, you will not be in trouble because you cannot understand or speak.
After all, the society of people needs timely communication.
Under the new draft, migrants who have lived in Austria for more than six years and have not received unemployment benefits or subsistence allowances will be eligible to apply for Austrian citizenship if they meet one of two requirements: a high level of German (B2);
2. Intermediate level of German but active contribution to the society, with more than 3 years of public service certification (such as: fire, volunteer nurse, Red Cross workers).
In addition, the draft also has certain requirements on the financial situation of applicants, who must show proof of monthly household living expenses of at least 1,000 euros for three consecutive years.
Applicants will have to pass a naturalization test, which will also be revised to include fewer questions about historical knowledge.
In addition, the current citizenship law only grants citizenship to children born out of wedlock to an Austrian mother, but under the new draft, children born out of wedlock to an Austrian father will also be granted citizenship if their DNA proves paternity.
It is reported that the revision of the nationality law is the Austrian federal government immigration integration Commissioner SebastianKurz (SebastianKurz) proposed in the autumn of last year, the original intention of lowering the threshold is to actively participate in the integration, make a contribution to the society of immigrants to provide earlier opportunities for citizenship, but the new revised draft is still criticized by Austria, the threshold is too high.
The details of the draft changes have not been fully finalized, but the general idea framework has been set and will be formally enacted on June 1.
Previously, in order to make immigrants contribute more to the Austrian economy, the Austrian federal government started to introduce five measures in March 2011 to facilitate the domestic education certification of immigrants from non-EU countries.
The policy came into effect in March 2012 and so far has had a noticeable effect, with the number of applicants up by about 30 percent over the previous year.
The five measures include: establishing the existing National Information Center for Academic Recognition (NARIC) as the main agency to handle this issue, and creating a website to inform applicants in multiple languages;
The acceptance time of certification verification has been shortened from half a year to 3 months;
The National Academic Recognition Information Center provides business owners with the service of comparing and evaluating degrees in Third World countries.