Konner_Long
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- Feb 4, 2020
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I think we are taking past each other here. Temporaria varies in length and depends on the category you apply for. You get it for between 365 days and three years.The first paragraph is exactly what my post said: "Two successive temporaries lead to permanent residency for Mercosur foreigners; for non-Mercosur, it is three successive temporaries.". The second paragraph is impossible to follow on every level.
Let's lay it out this way (again leaving the vexed question of eventual citizenship to one side):
That's the path: simple, explicit and chronological.
- To get to permanent residency (residencia permanente), a non-Mercosur individual must apply for (and be issued--usually some months after the initial application) a residencia temporaria (365 days), renew it once in the same subcategory (i.e., obtain a second set of 365 days at the conclusion of the first set), renew it a second time in the same subcategory (i.e. obtain a third set of 365 days at the conclusion of the second set). Having then completed the third set of 365 days, the non-Mercosur individual is now eligible to apply for residencia permanente (permanent residency).
Wanderlust's claims in its brochure seem to be clearly misleading. It (Wanderlust) does not have an "immigration regulatory framework"; Argentina does. By the looks of it, Wanderlust's program does not get one directly on the path to permanent residency under Argentina's regulatory framework: it only gets an individual inside the country in the first instance and at best a serious of short residencia transitorias. And residencia transitorias are not a path to permanent residency. Having arrived here via Wanderlust, a person needs to find a non-Wanderlust option to get onto the residencia temporaria path that leads (several years down the track) to permanent residency.
The most recent contributor to this website on the more serious path to permanent residency in the sub-category of Estudiante (in the category of residencia temporaria) was Autoluminescent in his/her thread:
Immigration changes: Health, Education, Deportation.
Look it up. The basic message (at least from that person's experience) is that even going via a serious Migraciones-approved university program, it is extremely difficult to pull off. That said, Autoluminescent has not posted back for some months, so we don't know how it worked out in the end.
Three years is still the threshold to apply for perm res for non mercosur. Assuming you get your three years on your first one, you would only need one renewal then you apply for perm res.
I'm on my first three year temporaria right now and this was the path I was told to follow.