Hi Eva, I am having the same problem. The worst thing is that I have seen the notification too late and I am out of time (only 5 days for the “subsanacion”… it’s a very short time !). I have not gone to Migraciones yet and I have run out of time to stay legally in Peru. What do you suggest me to do? Thank you very much for your help.
- This commment is unpublished.@Lucy McGHello Lucy?you have the same problem? Which one?And how late is too late? Before rejecting a visa application Migraciones usually sends a second notification. So, you may still have a chance.If the deadline Migraciones gave you is just exceeded by a few days I would immediately apply for an extension, which hopefully is accepted. How it's done is explained in our article Extension of a Migraciones deadline. Once you have done that get in contact with Migraciones as soon as possible and try to sort out the problem. If you already got the second notification reminding you about uploading the document, react now and do the same.If they already sent a notification informing you about the rejection of your visa application, talk to Migraciones asap. Depending on what they tell you, you can apply for a so-called "reconsideración de trámite". So, they re-evaluate your application and uploaded documents (you should attach the correct one) and hopefully then will approve your visa.Last option: if your visa application was rejected, you usually have 15 days to leave the country. So, you could leave, return and apply again.GreetingsEva
- This commment is unpublished.@SunflowerHi Eva!Thanks for getting back to me and for the advice. I just asked for a extension of Migraciones deadline and I would try to contact them asap.On March 14th, I got an email from migrations saying “que el documento emitido por el FBI no resulta el idóneo; en vista que, no es la autoridad competente para acreditar que no posea antecedentes judiciales, penales y policiales. (Esto a razón que Ud. presentó documento emitido por el FBI, el cual no es válido)” which doesn't seem to make sense to me. What would be the "organismo competente"?I found this: "The Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) centralizes criminal justice information and provides accurate and timely information and services to local, state, federal, and international law enforcement agencies, the private sector, academia, and other government agencies."...It looks like "el organismo competente".Do you think the U.S. Embassy in Peru can help ?
- This commment is unpublished.@ Lucy McGHello Lucy,yes the FBI is the competent authority to issue this document and from 2021, when Peru introduced the Antecedentes requirement, till mid-2024, the FBI criminal record check was the only document accepted by the Peruvian immigration authority, Migraciones, to prove that US Americans don't have a record. Then, sometimes a state issued record check was accepted as well.Since the beginning of this year there have been a few cases like yours where Migraciones wouldn't accept the FBI check. Nobody knows why. I even got in contact with Migraciones and was informed the FBI check is correct or a state issued check could be used also. When I asked why FBIs check weren't accepted, the person I spoke to played dumb, didn't know anything, wouldn't answer my questions.The only thing you can do now is get in contact with Migraciones and ask what's going on. Valeria (see the comment just below yours) had the same problem and was at least able to get them to accept a state issued check.You could always contact the US Embassy, but they most probably won't be able to help neither with Migraciones nor with applying for the state issued check.So, the only thing you could do is speak to someone at Migraciones. If you want to call the number is 1800. I would try and talk to someone in person at a Migraciones office and sort this out.GreetingsEva