Hello! First off, thank you all for the help you provide, there is so much great information on this forum! I've searched the board for issues similar to mine, but haven't found a satisfactory solution that covers my one extra factor: I'm going to have a uhaul full of my new wife's possessions when I cross the Canadian border. Here's my problem:
I am Canadian and I met a great girl from California online last year. We've had several visits back and forth without a problem and we're getting married in October in California. Our original plan was to file an outland application and once she has PR, move her here to Ontario. Recently she has been laid off and lost her place to live. She is living with a friend right now, but it's not a permanent arrangement.
I know that other people have had success bringing their spouse into Canada under a 6 month visitor status and filing an outland application for someone "visiting" in Canada. While I've read accounts of this, nobody has mentioned crossing into Canada as a visitor with a truckload of stuff.
We were hoping to drive to Canada with some of her belongings after we're married on October 10th. I understand that to the border agents, the uhaul full of her stuff will look like we're settling her illegally. So I think I have a few options:
-We could cross the border together at the same time and be upfront with border agents about everything. Hopefully they would understand my wife wanting to visit me and we could convince them we understand the limits of visitor status and of our intent to follow the law and submit our PR application. We'd claim her belongings as personally important items for a 4-5 month visit.
-We could cross together and tell them that she is just visiting (which she is) and NOT expose our marriage.
-We could cross individually at separate times and she could claim that she was just visiting friends or family in Canada. She does have friends and family here we can count on to back us up. We'd claim her belongings as personally important items for a 4-5 month visit.
-I could drive her belongings over the border, claim them as my own and fly her in separately.
-We could wait to bring her here as a visitor until we've submitted our outland application and received an acknowledgement. Maybe we could use our PR application as proof of us following the rules.
-By default, I could pay her rent and bills in California until she either finds a new job or the outland application goes through. =(
In order to prove to the border agents that we understand her visitor status and the proper immigration process, we can to bring these items to the border with us:
-marriage certificate proving spousal relationship
-completed (but not submitted yet) outland PR application package
-plane ticket for her back to California within 6 months
-how about a confirmed appointment in California from a dentist or doctor or something within 6 months?
-previous plane tickets and itineraries showing that we always leave when scheduled
Which is the best option here or is there a better way to do this? Is there anything else I can do to show our intent to follow the law and apply for PR properly?
I'm hoping that someone with some experience with border crossings of this kind can reply to me and shed some light on my situation. Thank you!
-Edwin
I am Canadian and I met a great girl from California online last year. We've had several visits back and forth without a problem and we're getting married in October in California. Our original plan was to file an outland application and once she has PR, move her here to Ontario. Recently she has been laid off and lost her place to live. She is living with a friend right now, but it's not a permanent arrangement.
I know that other people have had success bringing their spouse into Canada under a 6 month visitor status and filing an outland application for someone "visiting" in Canada. While I've read accounts of this, nobody has mentioned crossing into Canada as a visitor with a truckload of stuff.
We were hoping to drive to Canada with some of her belongings after we're married on October 10th. I understand that to the border agents, the uhaul full of her stuff will look like we're settling her illegally. So I think I have a few options:
-We could cross the border together at the same time and be upfront with border agents about everything. Hopefully they would understand my wife wanting to visit me and we could convince them we understand the limits of visitor status and of our intent to follow the law and submit our PR application. We'd claim her belongings as personally important items for a 4-5 month visit.
-We could cross together and tell them that she is just visiting (which she is) and NOT expose our marriage.
-We could cross individually at separate times and she could claim that she was just visiting friends or family in Canada. She does have friends and family here we can count on to back us up. We'd claim her belongings as personally important items for a 4-5 month visit.
-I could drive her belongings over the border, claim them as my own and fly her in separately.
-We could wait to bring her here as a visitor until we've submitted our outland application and received an acknowledgement. Maybe we could use our PR application as proof of us following the rules.
-By default, I could pay her rent and bills in California until she either finds a new job or the outland application goes through. =(
In order to prove to the border agents that we understand her visitor status and the proper immigration process, we can to bring these items to the border with us:
-marriage certificate proving spousal relationship
-completed (but not submitted yet) outland PR application package
-plane ticket for her back to California within 6 months
-how about a confirmed appointment in California from a dentist or doctor or something within 6 months?
-previous plane tickets and itineraries showing that we always leave when scheduled
Which is the best option here or is there a better way to do this? Is there anything else I can do to show our intent to follow the law and apply for PR properly?
I'm hoping that someone with some experience with border crossings of this kind can reply to me and shed some light on my situation. Thank you!
-Edwin