Hello Bryanna
Hope you are doing fine and you see this message.
My husband is a PR in Canada and he is working there since last September 2018.
We had planned to submit an outland spousal sponsorship for me and my child. However, I am finding it VERY difficult to live alone with a toddler. Without any parents and any family. My parents have passed away.
So we have decided to apply for a TRV and once I am in Canada to apply for an Inland spousal sponsorship.
Considering that I have stopped working since more than a year, and that I am financially dependent on my husband currently, can you please advise what proofs to provide in my case to get my application stronger.
I do have a house on my name but on my brother's name as well. I have a pension plan, education plan for my kid, and a life insurance plan as well. I do not currently have any bank balance though..
I have lands on my grand father's name, though it has not yet been transferred to my and my brother's name.
I stay in a rented house. My kid and I have health insurances here.
Do you advise on applying for the TRV for less than 6 months? If I apply for say 2months, can it be extended once I am there? Will I get minimum 6 months visa even if I apply for 2months?
Am I being unrealistic for applying a visitor visa?
Please advise. I am really in dilemma.
Give the TRV your best shot. But I would suggest taking a calculated risk. What this means: Apply for TRVs after your husband applies for spousal sponsorship by the outland route.... and the file is transferred to your local visa office.
I would not put all my hopes on the TRV >> Inland sponsorship route.... especially not in your situation where you don't have too many strong ties to your home country.
This will likely work/not work for your TRV:
1. Apply for the outland sponsorship. Wait for sponsor approval, file transfer.
2. As you're immigrating, the education plan, insurance plan, health insurance and similar long-term investment plans for your kid will fly out of the visa window because none of it will help when you're living in Canada. Nonetheless, you can include these investments.
3. Land on your grandfather's name - a non-starter. Unless you and your brother are direct inheritors + there's a Will, it's a long-drawn legal process to have the land transferred to you. That said, is it agricultural land? Do you earn an income from this?
4. Rented house: Do you have a lease? I assume your husband pays the rent (not directly, but the money he remits to you pays this rent).
5. Do you legally co-own the house with your brother? Is it rented? If yes, do you earn rent or share the rent with your brother?
6. Have you traveled to any other visa-required countries (US, UK, Schengen, Australia, NZ, etc)?
7. Do you and/or your husband have any financial investments in your home country? Bank term deposits, shares/stocks, mutual funds? Or any other investments that can be liquidated easily?
8. If you apply for a TRV, the visit must be for 2-3 weeks (not for two months). I recommend including some must-return events in your home country (for example, a wedding in the immediate family) + do include a detailed day-by-day visit itinerary with expense estimates + state you will not overstay this short 2-3 weeks visit as you don't want to jeopardize your PR processing