flight/tickets
1. do I need to have a return ticket ?
2. will the Vietnamese Embassy give me a 3 month visa,without a return ticket?
3. a price of a oneway flight from Viet Nam to Australia?
any help would be much appreciated,as these flights are only till the 18th August!!!!!!
thanks.
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Now if I get information to say I am being employed does that help?
Does that allow me to get a oneway ticket?
If I have a return ticket,my understanding is that you have to leave on that date correct?
Because I am hoping to stay for a year or two.
However I and many other flew in on one way tickets, if asked about leaving, just saying tour bus to Cambodia, then up to Thailand etc. Never known anyone from western countries have a problem.
Of course if you have a job already lined up, one way ticket is normal so wouldn't even be asked.
One way flights from VN to oz, plenty of flight checkers for that, prices change so often any quoted here would be changed by tomorrow.....
Ok I am booking ticket and will get the visa organised.(flying from Adelaide)
again thanks.
Yes I have seen the flights,thats why I asked the questions.
I just got email back from 'AirAsia' and they say you need return flight before you board.
So I have asked a few more questions and will wait and see.
In Hawaii they are looking at legislation to give the homeless a oneway ticket back to their home country.
It seems to me you lot know more about flying than the people I am talking to,so I think I will just buy the ticket and see what happens,as some of you have said they don't seem to ask to many questions.
I have not heard back as yet from 'AirAsia' below is what they emailed me earlier.
'Kindly be informed that guests can book one way flights as long as they book the return later on as for boarding a return or onward ticket is needed'.
my email - bluecheer69@gmail.com
anything you can get will help
thanks
At the airport when you fly internationally, at check-in there is a window that opens on the screen detailing the visa and travel policies of the destination country. The agent is supposed to compare what is required against what you have. Sometimes the agents are either lazy or don't care and will not question anything and others are far more diligent.
He rejected this and asked me to give him a hardcopy ! I stared at him for a full minute in awe and surprise and finally, he let me go and say next time, show the return ticket booking in hardcopy !
I have been in and out if HCMC for the last 5 years and this is the first time I come across this.
Not sure if this is Standard Operation Procedure now, but bet ya' I'll bring along a hardcopy.
VungTauDon wrote:The actual phrase they use is "Proof of onward travel" so any travel itinerary or something to that effect showing that you plan to leave the country is okay.
Would a Credit Card or a US1,000 bill be good enough to use as "Proof of onward travel" ? or am I asking for trouble ! serious.
Sometimes, I do one way ticket travel as I have not decide when to return.
Otherwise, when questioned, what answers do one-way-ticket traveler gives to be allowed to come into Vietnam.
MichaelChan wrote:Would a Credit Card or a US1,000 bill be good enough to use as "Proof of onward travel" ? or am I asking for trouble ! serious.
The is NO US1,000 bill. You will give your game away.
The Immigration Departments are not up to date with todays online travelers. Many are not aware of visa free travel for ASEAN nations. Unfortunately, with their limited English, they are the gate keepers and "authority" on their own rights.
My booking are sent to me via email and I can just copy it to Word or other word processor, change a few words and dates and print it out. They don't actually check your booking they just want to see it.
VungTauDon wrote:Proof of onward travel or a return ticket is almost the easiest thing in the world to fake.
My booking are sent to me via email and I can just copy it to Word or other word processor, change a few words and dates and print it out. They don't actually check your booking they just want to see it.
I love a good con!
Well thats what I want to do.
VungTau Don
I've never been asked for a proof of onward travel (return ticket) by immigration but I have been asked many times by various airlines.
Is this on a oneway ticket??
On my return trip to Vietnam the airlines sometimes ask for proof of onward travel as my travel ends in Vietnam and I don't usually have my tickets yet to return to Qatar. I have used my Vietnamese motorbike license as a permanent residency card...lol, but it is easier to just show them my faked travel booking
Trouble is AirAsia want proof before I board,as i said in one of my past posts.
This is becoming a pain in the arse,i am getting no response from them(AirAsia)
and I need to buy soon for these bloody cheap flights.
On entry into Viet Nam (Ho Chi Minh) what does anyone think I really need?
Is there a possibility I can arrive and buy a return ticket later?!?!?!?
bluecheer wrote:Hello Don, so to show them as we say 'one prepared earlier' is ok?
Trouble is AirAsia want proof before I board,as i said in one of my past posts.
That is all you need to show at the airport when you check in for your flight. When you get to the counter to get your boarding pass is when they will ask you for your proof of onward travel, that is when you show then the "special" document you made earlier.
bluecheer wrote:Hello Don, so to show them as we say 'one prepared earlier' is ok?
Trouble is AirAsia want proof before I board,as i said in one of my past posts.
This is becoming a pain in the arse,i am getting no response from them(AirAsia)
Hi Bluecheer,
I have not travel on AirAsia to Vietnam before so I would not be able to comment on this. But I have booked one-way ticket with Jetstar, LionAir, Tigerair to HCMC and do not have this problem nor need to show proof from the airline.
You may want to try these instead of AirAsia.
Passenger: DOE, JOHN Mr.
=======================================================================
AIRLINE REF: Amadeus 6HFR3R
ATP INSTONE REF: J8QCWH
AIRLINE REF: Amadeus 5HDSTY
ATP INSTONE REF: STH5FG
=======================================================================
QR 602 Thursday 04 Jul Doha DOH Ho Chi Minh SGN 01:10 T2 13:00 T2 Economy Class 40K TK
QR 605 Tuesday 30 Jul Ho Chi Minh SGN Doha DOH 01:20 T2 05:00 T2 Economy Class 40K Confirmed
CANCELLATION CHARGE: 0 BEFORE DEPARTURE
OUTBOUND CHANGE FEE: FREE SAME CLASS/ROUTE
INBOUND CHANGE FEE: N/A
PASSPORT VERIFIED: Y
perhaps has some of the easiest entry policies and immigration at the airport for me has been a bree, I think.
Again thanks for all your help.
All sounds really easy and straight forward.....ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
We will see.
hELLnoi wrote:MichaelChan wrote:Would a Credit Card or a US1,000 bill be good enough to use as "Proof of onward travel" ? or am I asking for trouble ! serious.
The is NO US1,000 bill. You will give your game away.....
From wiki...
"As of May 30, 2009, there are 165,372 $1,000 bills known to exists."
from Wikipedia wrote:The $1,000 bill featured Grover Cleveland on the obverse and the words "One Thousand Dollars" on the reverse. It was printed as a small-size Federal Reserve Note in 1918, 1934 and 1934A, and a small-size Gold Certificate in 1928 and 1934. As of May 30, 2009, 165,372 $1,000 bills were known to exist.[2] Let's Make a Deal game-show host Monty Hall occasionally gave $500 and $1,000 bills away as prizes, until they were discontinued.
Probably like the $2 bill, the $1,000 bill is just not widely circulated and people use them for good luck/collectibles. However, it does says "legal tender" and therefore is "redeemable in lawful money at the United States Treasury, or at any federal reserve bank."
Here's the link if you want to read more on the history of large currency denominations of US.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_deno … 2C000_bill
again thanks for all you help.
see you around mid-december
Tran Hung Dao wrote:hELLnoi wrote:MichaelChan wrote:Would a Credit Card or a US1,000 bill be good enough to use as "Proof of onward travel" ? or am I asking for trouble ! serious.
The is NO US1,000 bill. You will give your game away.....
From wiki...
"As of May 30, 2009, there are 165,372 $1,000 bills known to exists."
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … 000-2f.jpgfrom Wikipedia wrote:The $1,000 bill featured Grover Cleveland on the obverse and the words "One Thousand Dollars" on the reverse. It was printed as a small-size Federal Reserve Note in 1918, 1934 and 1934A, and a small-size Gold Certificate in 1928 and 1934. As of May 30, 2009, 165,372 $1,000 bills were known to exist.[2] Let's Make a Deal game-show host Monty Hall occasionally gave $500 and $1,000 bills away as prizes, until they were discontinued.
Probably like the $2 bill, the $1,000 bill is just not widely circulated and people use them for good luck/collectibles. However, it does says "legal tender" and therefore is "redeemable in lawful money at the United States Treasury, or at any federal reserve bank."
Here's the link if you want to read more on the history of large currency denominations of US.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_deno … 2C000_bill
Yes they are legal tender, but the Federal Treasury had stopped issuing them and withdrawing them from circulation.
They may be legal tender in the USA, BUT not in Vietnam.
I would reject them immediately as they are high valued and difficult to prove a real. I definitely cannot afford to lose USD1,000 to counterfeit.
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