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Spousal sponsorship

Adeoye1432

Full Member
Apr 15, 2020
45
10
Hi everyone
Is there anyone in the same situation. I have not received anything after submitting the additional document.

Application Received — Oct 16, 2020
AOR1 — April 7, 2021
Biometric Request — May 3, 2021
Medical Request — May 04, 2021
Sponsorship Approval — May 5, 2021
Medical Completed- May 18,2021
AOR2 — I am not sure I got it.
Pre-Arrival Letter — July 8,2021 (CPC, Ottawa)
Form 5669 correction request- July 9, 2021
Form 5669 submitted- July 11,2021
Biometric Enrollment — July 22, 2021
Decision Made —
PPR —
COPR —
We are both in situation. After I received medical passed in July 8. Nothing till now. The waiting is frustrating.
 

intuitive

Hero Member
Jun 11, 2020
288
62
So you are in the situation that you want to sponsor your foreign spouse for permanent residency of Canada and don't know where to start. Here are some tips:

Married, common law or conjugal partners

First you need to pick an application class. There are three of them: married, common-law and conjugal. For all of them, you need to prove the genuineity of your relationship. For common-law, you need to prove that you have lived together for 12 months or longer. For conjugal, you need to prove that you have combined your affairs as much as possible but there are real immigration barriers or other barriers preventing you from living together or getting married. Conjugal is the hardest to prove. For example, if your partner could get a visit visa to come to Canada for 6 months and then apply for an extension to get the full year, even though they will not be allowed to work, that is not considered an immigration barrier. An immigration barrier is if your partner tries to get a visit visa to come to Canada and is repeatedly refused. Some people have had luck with the conjugal class but try to avoid it if possible.

Outland or inland?

Now you need to decide if to apply outland or inland. If your spouse is not in Canada and can not get a visa to go to Canada, you must apply outland. That means that you will send your application to Mississauga and they will approve you as a sponsor. The time that takes is usually 1-2 months to but current processing times can be seen here: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/times/canada/process-in.asp#sponsorship After that, the application is forwarded to your local visa office. If your spouse is residing in a country other than the country of their nationality, you can pick which of the two visa offices you want. Otherwise it will be processed in their country of nationality. You can see the processing times here: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/times/international/05-fc-spouses.asp

If your spouse is staying in Canada as a visitor or on some other visa, you can pick whether you want to apply outland or inland. Outland is generally faster and has appeal rights but a downside to outland is that if an interview is required, your spouse will have to travel to the visa office in the country where it's being processed. Inland has the downside that it's generally not advised that your spouse travels while you are waiting for your processing because it is a requirement of inland that they reside in Canada and if they are denied entry at the border for some reason, your application is gone. If an interview is required for inland, you may also have to wait a long time for it. The inland application would be sent to Vegreville and if all goes well, you would get a first stage approval, usually in 6 to 8 months. The current processing times can be seen here: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/times/canada/process-in.asp#perm_res Then the file is forwarded to your local CIC office where you live and they will contact you for a landing appointment. Getting the PR with inland usually takes 12-18 months. If an interview is required for inland, Vegreville will not give first stage approval but instead will forward the application to the local CIC office without it and you will have to wait for them to have time for your interview. In some cases that can take a year or two. If you do get the first stage approval, your spouse will usually be eligible for health care and an open work permit. It is actually a good idea when applying inland to send an application form for a visit visa extension as well as the open work permit to be given at first stage approval all in one package so it's tied together.

Which method to pick depends on your situation. If your spouses country of nationality has a long processing time or your spouse does not want to have to travel there for a possible interview, then inland is the way to go. For faster processing and freedom of travel during the processing time, outland would be better. You can find the application forms for inland at http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/spouse.asp and the application forms for outland at http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/information/applications/fc.asp

Avoiding potential problems with your application

The most common reason for people to be called for an interview is that the visa officer has doubts about the relationship being genuine. It is up to you to send immigration some quality data, emails, chat logs, phone records, photos, letters and other material to prove to them that your relationship is the real thing. Other reasons you might have problems with is eligibility of the sponsor. The sponsor can not be on social assistance, can not be bankrupt and can not have a record of violent crimes or crimes against family members. If that is the case, better talk to a lawyer and get that cleared up before attempting to apply.

Dependent children

If your spouse has dependent children, they must be included in the PR application, even if they are not coming to Canada. They will need to have medicals as well to keep the option open to sponsor them later. The only way that immigration will accept the application without those medicals is if the children are no longer minors and refuse to have it or if the children are in the full custody of their other parent who refuses to make them available for medicals. In that case, your spouse needs to sign a statement stating that they know that they will never be able to sponsor these children to Canada in the future.

Dependent children are classified as single and either under 22 years of age or if they are older, they must have been full time students since before age 22 or dependent on their parent due to a disability or medical problem.

Refusals due to income and medicals

You will be asked to provide information about your income but you will not be denied to sponsor your spouse and dependent children because you do not make enough money. It is possible though that if you make absolutely no money at all that immigration may ask you how you plan to support yourselves.

Spouses and dependent children are also exempt from the clause about excessive demand on health care so you do not have to worry about them being refused for that reason.

Sponsoring your spouse while living in another country

If you are a Canadian citizen, you can sponsor your spouse without being in Canada but you do then have to prove that you are planning on moving to Canada when your spouse gets approved for permanent residency. Such proof can include having arranged jobs, being accepted to college, having arranged housing or letters from friends & relatives stating that they know of your plans and that you can stay with them while you look for housing etc.

If you are a PR, you must reside in Canada in order to sponsor your spouse. You can chance short vacations (remember that a Canadian vacation is generally no longer than 2 weeks) but if immigration finds out that you are not in Canada, you risk getting your application refused.
Hi Leon, I need to know my spouse working abroad right now and my file still waiting for IRCc decision . So if he return to home country before his police clearance done is there will be any issues on it ? So far I know if stay any country more than 6 months must need police certificate. Any insight opinion will be highly appreciated. Thanks advance for you help
 

Adeoye1432

Full Member
Apr 15, 2020
45
10
Same here ,, medicals are passed since July,16 and nothing after that... very very frustrating
I just received an update it says “we have sent you a letter” I can’t know anything until Monday because we are using representative they are in Canada. Please for those that received such message, does that mean “Prearrival letter” or what because the status still say “In process”.
 

sumaiama

Star Member
Nov 23, 2019
75
11
I just received an update it says “we have sent you a letter” I can’t know anything until Monday because we are using representative they are in Canada. Please for those that received such message, does that mean “Prearrival letter” or what because the status still say “In process”.
I received a letter after medicals are as passed saying to pay some fees ,, could be extra documents or anything ..
 

InfoSeeker12

Champion Member
Aug 28, 2012
1,492
388
Canada
LANDED..........
Sep 2013
Hi Everyone. im a Canadian Citizen. My fiance-to-be is living with her parents in Saudi Arabia, as they are expats there. I'd like to know how long it takes and how difficult it is to sponsor a spouse living in Saudi. Is anyone waiting to get their visa from Saudi in this forum. Really curious to hear about their experience, process and timelines. Grateful for anyinfo. Even if you are from neighbouring countries, UAE, Qatar etc. thank you.
 
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wyllie7

Newbie
Oct 25, 2021
3
0
Hey, I've been using the new online portal, it's great, but there's one issue: every time my partner and I try to complete section D of the schedule A form (personal history), we get a "technical error" message and are told to "try again later". I have been encountering this issue for a week now, and we've tried all manner of adjusting the formatting of the entries and nothing works. Anyone encounter this and resolve it? I put in a tech support request but was told I would not get a reply because of them prioritizing the Afghanistan crisis.

Thanks everyone.
 

sumaiama

Star Member
Nov 23, 2019
75
11
Hi Everyone. im a Canadian Citizen. My fiance-to-be is living with her parents in Saudi Arabia, as they are expats there. I'd like to know how long it takes and how difficult it is to sponsor a spouse living in Saudi. Is anyone waiting to get their visa from Saudi in this forum. Really curious to hear about their experience, process and timelines. Grateful for anyinfo. Even if you are from neighbouring countries, UAE, Qatar etc. thank you.
Hey there , my husband is sponsoring me and I love in UAE , I have applied since Feb , they received my Application on 15 Feb ,, got biometrics and Medicals so far done my application status is as medicals are passed since July now after that there was absolutely no update ,,, tbh it was a big struggle for me and husband as this is our second attempt first time it got rejected due to missing documents... I havent seen him for 2 years now and things aren't easy tbh ,,, we don't even know when we can hear anything back and what to plan or expect if you are planning to get engaged just get married right away and start the papers as it can take 2 years or less
 
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