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Oct 5, 2020
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Hi, my mom is staying in Canada under super visa program. Her first staying here by the officers at the border is 2 years and she is going to stay so long.
Just wondering if she will return after this 2 years in her country of origin is there any time she have by law to stay there before she can come back under super visa again since she have it 10 year?
 
Hi, my mom is staying in Canada under super visa program. Her first staying here by the officers at the border is 2 years and she is going to stay so long.
Just wondering if she will return after this 2 years in her country of origin is there any time she have by law to stay there before she can come back under super visa again since she have it 10 year?

There is no set amount of time. She should reestablish some ties to her home country before returning.
 
Hi, my mom is staying in Canada under super visa program. Her first staying here by the officers at the border is 2 years and she is going to stay so long.
Just wondering if she will return after this 2 years in her country of origin is there any time she have by law to stay there before she can come back under super visa again since she have it 10 year?

There is no law that she has to establish any ties back home, she can even cross the border at USA-Canada border crossing and re enter Canada.
My buddies parents did the same and they had no issue. They had Super-visa for 10 years
 
There is no law that she has to establish any ties back home, she can even cross the border at USA-Canada border crossing and re enter Canada.
My buddies parents did the same and they had no issue. They had Super-visa for 10 years

There are also parents that are refused at the border or only given a short stay when they attempt to reenter. It depends on the CBSA agent. A 10 year visa doesn’t mean they can stay for 10 years. Supervisa is still a visitor visa so you are eventually expected to return home and reestablish your ties.
 
The point being made is that a super visa is not a guarantee that anyone can enter Canada it is still a visitor visa so how long anyone can stay is up to the CBSA officer at the POE. On any one visit a super visa holder can be authorised to stay for upto 2 years on any one visit but it is not a blanket authorisation for someone to live in Canada for 10 years as a visitor .

There still may come a point in that 10 years validity where CBSA decide someone is no longer simply visiting but trying to live in Canada as a visitor so they may, and nobody here works for CBSA or IRCC, issue a shorter than 2 year authorised stay expecting a visa holder to spend some time during the 10 years in their home country..
 
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Who said any visa is guaranteed, point is simply anyone who has granted a super-visa can stay up to 2 years and it is not under CBSA discretion. I have so many friends that parents are granted super visa and stay for year and a half or two then they go back. That is only how super visa is different than regular visa IT LETS YOU STAY LONGER at a time.

But you assume whatever you wish to think, it don’t matter. Immigration policies or guidelines are not run
 
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Hello BS ( your nick tells us all about you haha Is it Bull s*** ) I like it lol

Who said any visa is guaranteed, point is simply anyone who has granted a super-visa can stay up to 2 years and it is not under CBSA discretion. I have so many friends that parents are granted super visa and stay for year and a half or two then they go back. That is only how super visa is different than regular visa IT LETS YOU STAY LONGER at a time.

But you assume whatever you wish to think, it don’t matter. Immigration policies or guidelines are not run by you

Entry to Canada is determined by CBSA at the border and only they can decide if someone in front of them will get a 2 year stay on entry to Canada regardless even if the conditions of a visa imply a stay can be upto 2 years.
 
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There are also parents that are refused at the border or only given a short stay when they attempt to reenter. It depends on the CBSA agent. A 10 year visa doesn’t mean they can stay for 10 years. Supervisa is still a visitor visa so you are eventually expected to return home and reestablish your ties.


Wrong again. No one is saying anything about them staying consecutive 10 years

My point being said is they can stay up to 2 years and they do not have to establish any ties with back home in order for them to depart from Canada and enter back again.

Please see the Canadian government website and don’t believe canuck

https://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=426&top=16
 
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Wrong again. No one is saying anything about them staying consecutive 10 years

My point being said is they can stay up to 2 years and they do not have to establish any ties with back home in order for them to depart from Canada and enter back again.

Please see the Canadian government website and don’t believe canuck

https://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=426&top=16

Based on others experiences people have either been denied entry if they have spent too many years in Canada on a supervisa and only returned home for a short period of time or have gone to the US to reenter again. Some in a similar situation are granted a short visit because the CBSA agent feels bad denying them entry and returning them on the next flight home. Some have no problem and are let in. CBSA agents have a huge amount of discretion. In general CBSA agents do not want to see people return straight after a long stay in Canada because a supervisa remains a visitor visa. Always at the discretion of a CBSA agent but a supervisa is not to live permanently in Canada and allow you to take a short vacation to visit your home country.
 
Based on others experiences people have either been denied entry if they have spent too many years in Canada on a supervisa and only returned home for a short period of time or have gone to the US to reenter again. Some in a similar situation are granted a short visit because the CBSA agent feels bad denying them entry and returning them on the next flight home. Some have no problem and are let in. CBSA agents have a huge amount of discretion. In general CBSA agents do not want to see people return straight after a long stay in Canada because a supervisa remains a visitor visa. Always at the discretion of a CBSA agent but a supervisa is not to live permanently in Canada and allow you to take a short vacation to visit your home country.
Can you stop repeating supervisa is a visitor visa, we all know that. Stop trying to have a debate here man. I provided the CIC link people who needs to understand about supervisa they will go there. You don’t have to be the hero here and act like you are a CBSA agent. You don’t even know anyone with supervisa I bet. You only speak from what you see in this forum but I know people with supervisa