If they can prove that they lived together for 12 months or more, I think their case is just as good as if they were married. Whether they are married or common-law, they still have to prove that their relationship is genuine.
immigration canada does not want people to get married just to be eligible to apply; the ones who felt that was the right time and they do they prepare in advance, they get engaged, they call family/friends, they send invitations, they go to honeymoon, they book places for reception church, whatever and tons and tons of more proofs; if it looks like a hasty marriage, ceremony, it is is red flag and they will ask questions abt it; even if let's say they do just the ceremony before and the rest after it is still planned....with her having to leave in a few months it's not that much time...tintin79 said:I honestly think common-law is a waste of time. Before you leave get married. Go get a license asap, go to city hall and marry him before you go back. Marriage is more guaranteed than any other form. Is there something stopping you from marrying him?
I don't think you need to do you? Just get your application in right away and it should be processed in 6 months - mine was common-law and has just been completed in a smidgen under 5 months. Save, save and save and then spend as much of the processing time in Canada as you absolutely can. Even if it means living on beans on toast, it surely must be do-able? I would be loathe to tell CIC anything at all. If you absolutely have to go home, then to be honest I still don't think I would bother saying anything. What do others think?sarah_black said:Thanks tintin79! I think I have a good chance as we have a joint lease, lots of photos and my boyfriend's been back with me to England twice too. At what point shall I notify immigration that I've left Canada (for common law- PR sponsorship purposes)?
initially i thought like u!!!! no update at all since it's kind of normal for her to go back since she's just on temporary stay...but on the other hand they write everywhere to update them of any changes!!!! i guess they mean major changes: a child, getting married, change of address, the sponsor getting a job if he hasn't etc...maybe others can give more conclusive reasoningVictorfoxtrot said:I don't think you need to do you? Just get your application in right away and it should be processed in 6 months - mine was common-law and has just been completed in a smidgen under 5 months. Save, save and save and then spend as much of the processing time in Canada as you absolutely can. Even if it means living on beans on toast, it surely must be do-able? I would be loathe to tell CIC anything at all. If you absolutely have to go home, then to be honest I still don't think I would bother saying anything. What do others think?
Fair point. I still don't think you even need to make mention of your future plans in your application. Send it off asap and you could have it all sorted by July and still have a nice trip back to the UK. Missmini is right - they do ask you to let them know of any changes, so you may want to update your address at a later stage (you can do this on Ecas) once you have both moved from your apartment. If they ask you (and I very much doubt they will), then you simply explain, that your visa ran out, therefore so did your employment, so you've both decided to spend a few months in the UK where you can legally work, until you can return as PR. I applied as common-law, and not once did they contact me to check we were still living together.sarah_black said:I want to go back to England even though I do have enough money saved to be able to stay, I don't want to spend it just on rent. My boyfriend and I can survive 6 or so months apart and it would also give him chance to move back with his parents to save for going to college in September.