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Proxy marriage

Edu89andrade

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Apr 6, 2024
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Me and my partner got marriage by proxy in Brazil. She is with me now in Canada, and I want her to stay here until I finish my PhD. Since it marriage by proxy is not recognized in Canada, would it be a problem for us to just get married again here to solve the marriage by proxy issue?
 

scylla

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Me and my partner got marriage by proxy in Brazil. She is with me now in Canada, and I want her to stay here until I finish my PhD. Since it marriage by proxy is not recognized in Canada, would it be a problem for us to just be married again here to solve the marriage by proxy issue?
No issue. Go ahead.
 
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Kinderday

Member
Mar 26, 2023
14
0
Me and my partner got marriage by proxy in Brazil. She is with me now in Canada, and I want her to stay here until I finish my PhD. Since it marriage by proxy is not recognized in Canada, would it be a problem for us to just get married again here to solve the marriage by proxy issue?
You are not gonna have any problem to obtain PR. Even if you don't live together, your spouse get permanent residency as long as you guys live in canada.
 

Kinderday

Member
Mar 26, 2023
14
0
LOL. Do you think that i am trolling Amiah? This is my experience. There's a reason why someone says that. Please, Think and speak Amiah.
 

Flyingfast

Hero Member
Feb 9, 2022
460
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You are not gonna have any problem to obtain PR. Even if you don't live together, your spouse get permanent residency as long as you guys live in canada.
If you don't live together, and you are both in Canada, You won't get approved!
 

Flyingfast

Hero Member
Feb 9, 2022
460
216
You get approved PR without living together. All you need to be with your spouse one or two days a week would be enough to get PR.
Yes couples live apart, but that's generally without choice because of immigration issues etc. If you both live in Canada but apart, you will face extra scrutiny and an uphill battle as it looks as if the marriage is not genuine.
 

armoured

VIP Member
Feb 1, 2015
17,241
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You get approved PR without living together. All you need to be with your spouse one or two days a week would be enough to get PR.
No idea why you're bringing this up, nothing to do with the OP's post, nor something that's even directly related.

Regardless you are at least partially wrong: inland applicants MUST live with their spouses, full-time, in Canada; a few days a week is absolutely not correct. They may not catch all such cases, but it is a requirement.

Outland applicants can live apart.
 

Kinderday

Member
Mar 26, 2023
14
0
No idea why you're bringing this up, nothing to do with the OP's post, nor something that's even directly related.

Regardless you are at least partially wrong: inland applicants MUST live with their spouses, full-time, in Canada; a few days a week is absolutely not correct. They may not catch all such cases, but it is a requirement.

Outland applicants can live apart.
I brought this up to help Edu89andrade as reply. No offense.Have you applied PR while you lived apart? How can you be so sure? Do you think that I am strolling or something? As I said base on my experience. We had a same address when we applied PR. After applied PR, we lived apart over year-and-a-half, my spouse obtained PR. Even I had a voluntary report to CBSA in order to investigate. As a result, she still maintain her PR status. you may know something by listening to what others say. I am telling you once again. This is my experience how my spouse obtained PR.
 

armoured

VIP Member
Feb 1, 2015
17,241
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I brought this up to help Edu89andrade as reply.
Edu89andrade said NOTHING of the sort about living apart. How could it 'help' if it has no connection to the stated facts?

No offense.Have you applied PR while you lived apart? How can you be so sure? Do you think that I am strolling or something? As I said base on my experience. We had a same address when we applied PR.
No offense, but 'we applied PR' implies that you applied together for PR status (for example under an economic PR class), NOT under spousal sponsorship. If not, no relation to the question at hand.

So: did you apply to sponsor your spouse, or was your spouse part of your PR application?

The restriction I referred to is specifically referenced by IRCC for spousal sponsorship (inland), formally known as 'Spouse or Common Law Partner in Canada Class.'

You can check the form you submitted, IMM5533 (checklist) for this. If you used a different form, probably wasn't spousal sponsorship.