Your family does not have one mobility problem. It has a connected mobility architecture.
Parent travel, children abroad, spouse access, long-stay options, residency inclusion, and Plan B — designed as one plan, not five separate applications.
Apply for Family Mobility ReviewA child enrolled in a UK university affects what the parent visa strategy needs to demonstrate. A spouse working in Dubai affects what the family residency plan should look like. A Plan B for the family in Portugal changes what the passport portfolio needs to include.
Family mobility architecture treats these as one connected question — not six separate ones handled by six different people.
Can parents travel independently?
Yes — but parent visa applications require specific documentation logic. A visit-purpose strategy distinct from the principal applicant is essential.
Are dependent children included in residency?
Most programs allow it. Whether to include them — and how — depends on age, education plans, and citizenship trajectory.
Does a Plan B mean leaving Bangladesh?
No. It means having the right to leave, remain elsewhere, and return — on your own terms, at the time of your choosing.
Parent visa applications carry some of the highest refusal rates for BD applicants. The documentation logic is different from a professional visa — financial dependency, intent to return, and family ties must be architected carefully and consistently.
Student visa strategy, institutional application sequencing, dependent enrollment across jurisdictions, and the long-term question of which country the child will eventually have the strongest connection to.
Dependent visa applications, joint travel planning, separate professional mobility for working spouses, and the intersection of family movement with residency and citizenship planning.
For families considering 3–12 month stays abroad — for education, medical access, or lifestyle purposes — the right visa type, duration, and jurisdiction require deliberate selection rather than default choice.
Most residency and citizenship programs allow dependent inclusion. The question is whether the principal applicant's strategy is structured from the beginning to accommodate it — or patched together after the fact.
A second base. A country where the family has the right to remain regardless of what happens in Bangladesh — political, economic, or personal. Designed quietly, documented properly, reviewed annually.
Children age, parents travel more or less, employment changes, new family members arrive, and residency timelines shift. Annual reviews ensure the plan reflects the family as it actually is — not as it was 24 months ago.
The intake maps your family structure, travel needs, children's plans, residency interest, and Plan B objectives — and returns a connected framework.
Apply for Family Mobility Review