I know people who hired a lawyer and they recommended it to us as well (they were very happy with the lawyer's work). But we felt like our case was pretty straight forward, and we felt that we were able to write a strong application without an official help. This forum is also very helpful for solving problems with the application. So I would say if you don't mind spending extra money on somebody who's going to help you through the process I don't see why you wouldn't use one. But usually, if your case doesn't involve complicated immigration law issues, you can definitely do it yourself and for my understand there's no difference in processing times.moti said:Is hiring a lawyer beneficial in spousal sponsorship application ? or I can just do that myself and there ll be no affect on the processing time ? How many of the applicants hire a lawyer ?
there are many cases where those who have used lawyers actually took longer than those who did it themselves. while there are good ones out there, they are not cheap nor are they plentiful. if there's a lawyer, they receive all communication from cic first. they can sometimes be slow in forwarding that information on. if you don't have a lawyer, all communicaiton goes to the sponsor and applicant directly.FiveO said:for my understand there's no difference in processing times.
Thanks for the info! My experience was just from one case where the application process went very smoothly and the PR was granted in very short time so it seems this couple got lucky finding a good lawyer. It will be interesting to hear people's experience on having a lawyer.CDNPR2014 said:there are many cases where those who have used lawyers actually took longer than those who did it themselves. while there are good ones out there, they are not cheap nor are they plentiful. if there's a lawyer, they receive all communication from cic first. they can sometimes be slow in forwarding that information on. if you don't have a lawyer, all communicaiton goes to the sponsor and applicant directly.
one of the biggest issues i think is that most lawyers don't understand that a person can apply "outland" while being IN canada as a worker, student or visitor, and pushes applicants to apply inland when they were much better off applying outland. that alone suggests they don't know the process like a person going through it would...FiveO said:Thanks for the info! My experience was just from one case where the application process went very smoothly and the PR was granted in very short time so it seems this couple got lucky finding a good lawyer. It will be interesting to hear people's experience on having a lawyer.
This is nothing to do with a lawyer. If the case was simple - it went smoothly because of that. Neither lawyer nor any representative could speed up the process.Thanks for the info! My experience was just from one case where the application process went very smoothly and the PR was granted in very short time so it seems this couple got lucky finding a good lawyer. It will be interesting to hear people's experience on having a lawyer.
By application process I meant gathering the application package (you know, no sleepless nights thinking about question number 728 or refreshing canadavisa for hopefully fast answers). Like I said before, I don't think having a lawyer speeds the process once it's up to CIC.Regina said:This is nothing to do with a lawyer. If the case was simple - it went smoothly because of that. Neither lawyer nor any representative could speed up the process.
moti said:Is hiring a lawyer beneficial in spousal sponsorship application ? or I can just do that myself and there ll be no affect on the processing time ? How many of the applicants hire a lawyer ?