
Originally Posted by
Jagan01
Hi,
My wife was in a similar situation and we decided that it is better not to go to India. Rejection on F1 visa is unlikely but again there is no guarantee. So you need to evaluate your situation.
Below are the few points that made us decide not to go to India.
1. I was paying for my wife's education. You mention this on your I-20. Family funds, Personal funds, etc. You would have sent some bank statements.
2. Since, I was sponsoring her MBA, the question would have come up during F1 stamping as to who is paying.
3. More importantly, I had filed I-140 application and established immigrant intent. The worrisome part was that the sponsor had established immigrant and spouse of the sponsor is appearing for non-immigrant visa. This is a discrepancy on its own.
There are situations, and possible explanations, where candidate can say that F1 is required if I want to accept student assistantship. That is the main reason we wanted to move to move to F1.
It is a matter of your risk appetite.
In your case, I would say that you stand better chance to get stamping done. You have 3 more semesters left, and even in case of rejection you can comeback on H4 and again convert using COS. Here is my opinion:
- Go for stamping if you have more than 2 semesters left (eventually 2 semesters is required to get OPT). Worst case would be that you might miss out on CPT.
- Do not go if you have less than 2 semesters left
I am just giving an opinion. The final decision should be taken by you after considering your situation.