Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, I've lived in Europe for a decade, so here's my advice:
You cannot just arrive in England and expect to stay for 6 months on a tourist visa. The immigration officers at the airport will ask you how long you will be in UK and what you will be doing there, and they will not let you in when you tell them you plan to get an apartment and hang out for 6 months. I guarantee this is what will happen: these people work to prevent over-stayers, and with heightened security/spotlight on immigration issues, there is now way they will let a clueless American just show up with intentions to hang out. We know several people who were denied entry to UK after trying to enter for similar reasons.
You really need a work visa and a clear plan for what you will do, why, and when you will leave. A student visa would also work, but I don't think this is what you need to be doing right now.
You won't be able to get a bank account in UK. It is expensive to live there, and you should not expect the same standard of living you enjoy on your work-at-home gig in the US. You need a well-paying job and a work visa. And you need to solidify your expectations and plan. Really.
My DC was able to get a bank account in the UK on a student visa. It was actually necessary because either DCs rent or tuition (I forget which) is required to come from a UK bank. But it's definitely harder to open a bank account there than here.
Yes, but your DC is a full time student (and it was still hard, right?). It will be impossible for OP, on her tourist visa, to open a bank account in UK, and she WILL need one for her rent (if she's going to go the legal route with rent).
OP, you remind me of the daughter of our American friends (they were working in another European country, and their daughter had spent the summer with them). The girl was 25 and worked as a yoga teacher in the US. She tried to fly into UK for a "vacation" after visiting her parents, and she was turned away by the Immigration officers after they asked a lot of questions about what a private yoga instructor does and where/how she works; they were very concerned that she planned to "give lessons" in the UK/work, and they told her so. She didn't even plan to work in UK, but she was turned away because she didn't know anyone there, didn't have a lot of money, had no solid plan or employment in UK, and had a job that was very "mobile"; you will be seen the same way, and they will turn you away because they don't want people coming to just live/hang out with no plan. You will be seen as a drain on the system if you plan to live there for 6 months with plan: if YOU were British, would you want someone like you going there and taking advantage of the healthcare system into which you pay (hefty) taxes (because NHS services would be free to you as soon as you set foot in the UK, just as they are free for the many "medical tourists" who arrive in UK from other countries to take advantage of this)?
We also know an American man who was turned away when he tried to enter UK for a week's vacation because the immigration officer kept asking him for proof of funds for his holiday in the UK, and he didn't have any paper bank statements, and wasn't allowed into the wifi zone to show them his bank account online. This doesn't happen to most short-term American vacation tourists, but it did happen three weeks ago to our friend, so maybe they are even more meticulous about screening now.
This is not the time to pack up and try to do this, OP.