IuliaMB said:
Common law means not married but having lived together for at least one year. What everyone is trying to say is that because travel between US and Canada is possible there was no immigration barrier to getting married. I would argue that there was an immigration barrier to continuously living together for one year. I am not sure which stance CIC would take in this case.
There are no real barriers to the 2 of you figuring out how to live together. What IRCC considers a barrier is not being able to travel to eachother's country to see eachother or live together. There are many countries that require visas to travel to Canada, and if a person is continuously refused for a visa and can't live with their spouse elsewhere because of visa issues and the canadian can't get a visa to go to the other country, then THAT is a barrier. US and Canadian citizens do not require visas to enter each country, can freely marry eachother in either country, and they have the ability to stay long enough to become commonlaw in both countries. A lot of people can also find a 3rd country to live in together to become commonlaw.
what many people have been successful doing is:
1) the us person enters canada as a visitor, worker or student and lives with their significant other. if a person enters as a visitor, they can apply to exend their stay as a visitor online and request to stay 12+ months to receive commonlaw status. many, many people are approved extensions for this reason. if the us person is a visitor, they can NOT legally work in Canada while they are there as a visitor. They can either work remotely for a us employer or choose to not work.
2) figure out how to do the opposite in the US
3) find a 3rd country where both of you can obtain visas and live there continuously to gain commonlaw status.
4) get married
a US/Canadian couple has no chance at conjungal.AT.ALL. This is not a unique situation. There are options available. choosing to not move forward with those options because of financial reasons is NOT considered a barrier, and you'll deal with a long processing time just to be told you don't qualify for sponsorship.