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CanadianInKorea

Full Member
Apr 11, 2019
49
6
Hello,

My wife and I recently arrived in Canada (July 6th) and are working on our application. We were legally married in South Korea--she's a Korean citizen and I'm Canadian.

One section we're a little worried about in our application is in the "Proof of Relationship" section. One question asks "Are you and your spouse currently living together?"--and the answer is yes, we are. However, we are currently living with my parents while we get our footing in Canada. From some of the threads I've read here, CIC seems pretty strict when it comes to the Proof of Cohabitation section.

We are unable to provide/submit a lot of the evidence it asks us for, such as proof of joint ownership of a home (living with parents), rental agreement with both our names (again, living with parents), joint utility accounts in our name (parents pay for them), etc.

That being said, we can definitely provide some of the evidence the form asks for.

1) We recently opened a joint bank account together and I'm going to call my credit card company and ask them to add my wife's name to my card.

2) We are both going to get new cell phone plans and they'll have our names and the same address (my parents' address) on each bill.

3) We are also thinking of getting my wife to apply for her Ontario driver's license as Korea has a license exchange program with Ontario. Getting her Ontario license has its own problems though such as getting her license and documents notarized by the Korean embassy. But this is doable.

4) Also I'll get my parents to write a detailed letter stating that my wife and I have lived at their address since arriving in Canada, and that we are planning to live with them for the foreseeable future. I also had a friend write a letter when he came to visit which stated our relationship was genuine and that we were living at my parents place.

5) We also have some receipts from when we mailed things from Korea to my parents' house (the receipts have my parents address on them). Not sure if this would be good evidence or not.

This seems to be the best we can do for the evidence listed on the form. The form says to choose at least two items, which I believe we can do. However, I worry that our evidence isn't the strongest. Is there anything I missed that would help our case here? What else can we submit?

There's also a note that says if we didn't check at least two boxes above, to write a detailed explanation. Would it be worthwhile to submit a written explanation clarifying why we don't have a lot of evidence and stating our plans for the future?
 
Hello,

My wife and I recently arrived in Canada (July 6th) and are working on our application. We were legally married in South Korea--she's a Korean citizen and I'm Canadian.

One section we're a little worried about in our application is in the "Proof of Relationship" section. One question asks "Are you and your spouse currently living together?"--and the answer is yes, we are. However, we are currently living with my parents while we get our footing in Canada. From some of the threads I've read here, CIC seems pretty strict when it comes to the Proof of Cohabitation section.

We are unable to provide/submit a lot of the evidence it asks us for, such as proof of joint ownership of a home (living with parents), rental agreement with both our names (again, living with parents), joint utility accounts in our name (parents pay for them), etc.

That being said, we can definitely provide some of the evidence the form asks for.

1) We recently opened a joint bank account together and I'm going to call my credit card company and ask them to add my wife's name to my card.

2) We are both going to get new cell phone plans and they'll have our names and the same address (my parents' address) on each bill.

3) We are also thinking of getting my wife to apply for her Ontario driver's license as Korea has a license exchange program with Ontario. Getting her Ontario license has its own problems though such as getting her license and documents notarized by the Korean embassy. But this is doable.

4) Also I'll get my parents to write a detailed letter stating that my wife and I have lived at their address since arriving in Canada, and that we are planning to live with them for the foreseeable future. I also had a friend write a letter when he came to visit which stated our relationship was genuine and that we were living at my parents place.

5) We also have some receipts from when we mailed things from Korea to my parents' house (the receipts have my parents address on them). Not sure if this would be good evidence or not.

This seems to be the best we can do for the evidence listed on the form. The form says to choose at least two items, which I believe we can do. However, I worry that our evidence isn't the strongest. Is there anything I missed that would help our case here? What else can we submit?

There's also a note that says if we didn't check at least two boxes above, to write a detailed explanation. Would it be worthwhile to submit a written explanation clarifying why we don't have a lot of evidence and stating our plans for the future?

Hi

Sign a rental agreement with your parents.

No, you don't need to submit an explanation because you will be providing the necessary documents.
 
Do not worry, you already have enough evidence and you are married, you no longer need to prove that you live for 1 year together with your wife . I applied as a common law and I had no bank account and joint credit card with my boyfriend, no lease, insurance and no mortage! I just sent a joint phone bill, my ID and his driver's license with the same address and bank card and credit card with the same address! they asked me for more proof cohabitation documents, as I had nothing they asked for, I only sent letters from my friends and family and my landlord saying that me and my boyfriend had been living together for over 1 year. Last week I got decision made and received my inland interview letter. Good lock
 
Do not worry, you already have enough evidence and you are married, you no longer need to prove that you live for 1 year together with your wife . I applied as a common law and I had no bank account and joint credit card with my boyfriend, no lease, insurance and no mortage! I just sent a joint phone bill, my ID and his driver's license with the same address and bank card and credit card with the same address! they asked me for more proof cohabitation documents, as I had nothing they asked for, I only sent letters from my friends and family and my landlord saying that me and my boyfriend had been living together for over 1 year. Last week I got decision made and received my inland interview letter. Good lock

There is no 1 year requirement but they still need to prove cohabitation.
 
Sign a rental agreement with your parents.
Is this actually something we can do? Have you heard of this being done in the past? Even if they don't charge us anything, I suppose they could say "$400 per month" to rent the spare room where we're staying.

Any advice on how to go about this to make it look legit? Technically my parents' house isn't a "rental property".
 
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Is this actually something we can do? Have you heard of this being done in the past? Even if they don't charge us anything, I suppose they could say "$400 per month" to rent the spare room where we're staying.

Any advice on how to go about this to make it look legit? Technically my parents' house isn't a "rental property".

Yes, you can do it. Just use a standard rental agreement. You don't need to make up a rental price.

There is no formal process to be a rental property.
 
Yes, you can do it. Just use a standard rental agreement. You don't need to make up a rental price.

There is no formal process to be a rental property.
So the rental fee could be $0?

Is filling out a basic rental agreement a better option than having my parents write a letter to explain the situation?
 
So the rental fee could be $0?

Is filling out a basic rental agreement a better option than having my parents write a letter to explain the situation?

Personally, I would go with a letter from your parents if they are not actually charging you rather than some 'fake' agreement.

Plenty of young people do this with their parents, it is really not that unusual and CIC would understand this. I have done this for my daughter, in the UK it is called 'The Bank of Mum and Dad'!
 
So the rental fee could be $0?

Is filling out a basic rental agreement a better option than having my parents write a letter to explain the situation?

I would go with the agreement but up to you. I can't say if one option is better than the other.
 
Personally, I would go with a letter from your parents if they are not actually charging you rather than some 'fake' agreement.

Plenty of young people do this with their parents, it is really not that unusual and CIC would understand this. I have done this for my daughter, in the UK it is called 'The Bank of Mum and Dad'!

Not paying rent doesn't make it fake. Many people have rental agreements with adult children living at home even if they aren't paying rent.
 
Dear all, any samples for this rental agreement with parents that worked for someone? we are not sure how it should be and if the information my parents are thinking about including are enough for canada officials. Thanks!
 
Dear all, any samples for this rental agreement with parents that worked for someone? we are not sure how it should be and if the information my parents are thinking about including are enough for canada officials. Thanks!

Just print off the standard rental agreement for your province.
 
Did you file your income taxes as married? You can use those documents as well.