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My girlfriend voted in the October 2024 provincial election using her Mission address. We’ve been living together in Abbotsford since December 2023 for our common-law PR application. Could this cause any issues with proving continuous cohabitation?

No.
 
We were currently almost completed the Conjugal partner app when I realixed this is only for people who have immigration barriers which we do not have. My question, if we are not married, how can we be common law if they are not allowed in the country for more than 6 months in a year? My partner is a US citizen planning to move here but only visits for 3 weeks to 2 months at a time bc we try and spread the 6 month cap throughout the year. So how does one live together for a entire year with this rule to be able to fill out the common law sponsorship application??
 
We were currently almost completed the Conjugal partner app when I realixed this is only for people who have immigration barriers which we do not have. My question, if we are not married, how can we be common law if they are not allowed in the country for more than 6 months in a year? My partner is a US citizen planning to move here but only visits for 3 weeks to 2 months at a time bc we try and spread the 6 month cap throughout the year. So how does one live together for a entire year with this rule to be able to fill out the common law sponsorship application??

Extremely easy. Enter for the six months and then apply for an extension from within Canada to stay the year to become common law. A conjugal application has almost no chances of succeeding in your case.
 
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Extremely easy. Enter for the six months and then apply for an extension from within Canada to stay the year to become common law. A conjugal application has almost no chances of succeeding in your case.

Even easier: stop messing about with trying to cobble together 12 months to be common law and just get married.

The lengths people go to in order to avoid 'marriage' when the whole point of common law is that it's 'de facto marriage.'

(Yes, I know there are some subtle legal distinctions...)
 
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Even easier: stop messing about with trying to cobble together 12 months to be common law and just get married.

The lengths people go to in order to avoid 'marriage' when the whole point of common law is that it's 'de facto marriage.'

(Yes, I know there are some subtle legal distinctions...)
I think a lot don't know that they have a lot of common legal obligation and right after becoming common law partners. (getting health insurance and insurance from work...etc.)
It's "almost the same" as marriage just has less legal process when partners want to separate or leave the relationship.
 
It's "almost the same" as marriage just has less legal process when partners want to separate or leave the relationship.

You know my opinion on that: tough.

If couples wish to benefit from the spousal immigration program, let them take on the requisite 'legal process.' They're already attesting (in fact) by docs that they are in a permanent relationship.

At least, of course, when there are no impediments.
 
I see that some people are able to check the progress of their application. Something about a tracker.
My question is, how do we track our application? The PR portal we used to apply isn't helpful.
Also, we have received AOR.
 
I see that some people are able to check the progress of their application. Something about a tracker.
My question is, how do we track our application? The PR portal we used to apply isn't helpful.
Also, we have received AOR.

You can PR Tracker to track your application : https://ircc-tracker-suivi.apps.cic.gc.ca/en/login

You can also link your PR application to your gckey account. The PR Portal you used to submit your PR is not helping. I got my PR since July 2014, still shows "in review" there
 
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Hey everyone,

I applied for permanent residency under common-law sponsorship with my partner, and we used an immigration representative (Right Link Immigration). They have 5-star reviews on Google, and we feel our application was solid, but I’m feeling nervous after what happened to my brother.

My brother and his family (wife + kids in UAE) applied for a visitor visa to visit me in Canada, and I helped review the application. Everything seemed fine, but they were denied due to "insufficient ties to home country", which shocked us. My brother literally applied for my visitor visa a year ago and this year, and it was approved within days. I know visitor visas are different, but this whole situation makes me worried about my PR application getting refused for no reason.

So, I have a few questions for those who have gone through this process:

1. Does using a representative help with approval, or is it just paperwork assistance?


2. Has anyone had issues using a consultant like Right Link?


3. Are there any "random" PR rejections, or do they usually ask for more info first?



I’ve been living with my partner for over a year, and we have proof of cohabitation (joint lease, bills, etc.), but after my brother’s visitor visa got rejected, I can’t shake this feeling that my PR might get randomly refused too.

Would love to hear your
experiences. thanks!

1) paperwork assistance. Most of us here aren't huge fans of consultants
2) most of us here have applied on our own
3) there are no random rejections. Rejections happen for a reason. For example, of an application is income, it's generally returned. IRCC will sometimes ask for more information, for example if they have concerns if the relationship is genuine.
 
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I totally get that many people apply on their own, but in my case, my consultant made it way easier to organize everything quickly and submit a complete application. Wouldn't a consultant who specializes in this process help reduce the chances of rejection or delays? I’ve read that properly structured applications have better success rates

1) paperwork assistance. Most of us here aren't huge fans of consultants
2) most of us here have applied on our own
3) there are no random rejections. Rejections happen for a reason. For example, of an application is income, it's generally returned. IRCC will sometimes ask for more information, for example if they have concerns if the relationship is genuine.
 
I totally get that many people apply on their own, but in my case, my consultant made it way easier to organize everything quickly and submit a complete application. Wouldn't a consultant who specializes in this process help reduce the chances of rejection or delays? I’ve read that properly structured applications have better success rates

Yes, a very good consultant would. However we've seen far too many examples of sloppy work and basic mistakes by consultants here which is why most of us are not fans, especially consultants located outside of Canada. Best to do on your own. However since you've already submitted, hopefully yours did a good job. Good luck.
 
It cost me $2,300 for their help—not gonna lie, money I could definitely use elsewhere—but I feel fairly certain the application was well-prepared and complete. I know consultants get a bad rep sometimes, but this one had great reviews and really streamlined the process for me. Hoping for the best! I'll post updates as things happen. Really worried about refusals etc. if you look them up they're in Abbotsford have an office. Stellar (5 star reviews, perfect score on Google and 277 reviews). I'm really hoping it will work out

Hopefully you reviewed the full application in detail before they submitted.

I don't need to look up reviews. Just not a fan in general.
 
Yeah, I made sure to review everything before submission. I get that some consultants do sloppy work, but I personally found mine helpful. Either way, it’s submitted now, so I’ll see how it goes and post updates in case it helps others

Hopefully you reviewed the full application in detail before they submitted.

I don't need to look up reviews. Just not a fan in general.
 
Applying for spousal sponsorship: My spouse is in Canada on a PGWP valid till July 2026. Considering inland processing time (28 months) vs. outland (faster).

Can we apply for an OWP with an outland application while he remains in Canada?

If outland is approved, would he receive PPR or eCOPR directly (since he’s physically here)?

Thanks for any insights.