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Muj

Star Member
Jun 25, 2018
188
19
Hey everyone,

In the past, I applied twice for a Canadian visa and was refused on the grounds of insufficient ties to India. That was a fair assessment back then. However, things have changed significantly in my life since those applications.

my earlier posts or threads explains more about my past immigration history with Canada. I’ll be honest—I was quite naive and inexperienced when I made some of those earlier decisions. I’ve made mistakes, and I completely acknowledge that.



Today, I’m well-settled in India. I’m in a committed relationship, I’ve purchased a house, and I’ve established and am running a growing food business. I also have passive income from rentals and other responsibilities that tie me deeply to my current life here. While I’m not married, I’m emotionally and practically grounded where I am.



Right now, I’m only looking to visit Canada briefly—about 10 to 14 days—to see my mother. With everything going on here (my business, rental management, house-related matters), relocating is not even an option for me.


I understand that some people may have strong opinions based on my past. Some even felt I tried to take advantage of the system. I want to clarify that nothing was done with bad intent—only out of confusion and desperation at a difficult time in life. I’ve learned a lot since then and have built a more stable and responsible life.


That said, I’m not very up to date on how visa approvals are going these days. If anyone has advice, insights, or just honest input, I’d really appreciate it.


Thanks for reading.
 
Do you have a family in India? A committed relationship is really hard to demonstrate as a tie.
I don’t have family in India. My sister younger brother and mother in Canada. I live here and my gf lives in Germany. I have travel history to turkey, Germany and uae
 
Is it worth a try considering change in circumstances. Very briefly. I have a business house and rental income. Travel history and been 5 years and 7 months in India
 
Is it worth a try considering change in circumstances. Very briefly. I have a business house and rental income. Travel history and been 5 years and 7 months in India
You can apply and may be approved but you are single with no family ties. Your mom lives in Canada. Committed relationship is not married. Good luck.
 
Thanks a bunch
All rejections have same reasons that you dont have a tie. I have seen people ith no ties or even lesser tie compared to you and still gets visitor visa. Its all about thier quota . in 2024 it was a highest rejection ratio then before. May be they are open to give more visas after the elections or in 2025. Keep trying and you will definitely get it. Prepare a truthful strong letter to describe purpose of vist and strong reason to return back like comitment in business and assets and other strong reasons like if you have grandparents and you have to take care of them etc. all the best
 
All rejections have same reasons that you dont have a tie. I have seen people ith no ties or even lesser tie compared to you and still gets visitor visa. Its all about thier quota . in 2024 it was a highest rejection ratio then before. May be they are open to give more visas after the elections or in 2025. Keep trying and you will definitely get it. Prepare a truthful strong letter to describe purpose of vist and strong reason to return back like comitment in business and assets and other strong reasons like if you have grandparents and you have to take care of them etc. all the best
thanks
 
All rejections have same reasons that you dont have a tie. I have seen people ith no ties or even lesser tie compared to you and still gets visitor visa. Its all about thier quota . in 2024 it was a highest rejection ratio then before. May be they are open to give more visas after the elections or in 2025. Keep trying and you will definitely get it. Prepare a truthful strong letter to describe purpose of vist and strong reason to return back like comitment in business and assets and other strong reasons like if you have grandparents and you have to take care of them etc. all the best

Not sure where you’re getting all this false information. There are a variety of reasons why people are rejected for TRVs. 2024 had a higher rejection rate than 2023 for example because IRCC loosened many of their TRV screening tools and also gave out blanket TRV approvals partially because they wanted to decrease the backlog of application that existed. This lead to a huge issue with non-genuine visitors entering Canada to work, claim asylum, try to enter the US, etc. Partway through 2024 TRV screenings were tightened up again and are similar to what they used to be. Reapplying over and over again is a bad idea and raises concerns with IRCC that you are desperate to enter Canada. Ordering GCMS notes and addressing every reason for the previous refusal is the best idea. There are some things that can’t be overcome so OP may need to wait and develop stronger ties to India, do more traveling, etc. His family may have to visit him.
 
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