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heyven100

Full Member
May 13, 2016
34
0
Hi
We are going to submit our PR application, but my husband applied for a visitor visa for 4 months it got refused.
Main reasons were:

-families ties in canada and in country of residence
-purpose of visit
-travel history

He submitted stamps for visits, and provided family form, but only stated the purpose of the visit in the Letter of explanation.

I work for an airline, so we provided only sample of a staff ticket he will have, (did not provide return flight), and the purpose of the visit was to be with his wife for a short period.

Is it really that hard to get a TRV if you marry a canadian citizen?

We are reapply to ask only for one month because my parents want to have a wedding party here before our wedding gets "old".

Any suggestions for anyone who has got approved??

Thank you!
 
Yes - it's generally more difficult to obtain a TRV if your spouse is Canadian since CIC often believes you have plans to remain in Canada long term and aren't a genuine visitor.

Requesting a four month visit was unfortunately a mistake since it demonstrates lack of ties to the home country. If you want to try reapplying, ask for 2-3 weeks maximum.

What evidence did your husband provide to show proof of ties to his home country? If there's anything he failed to include the first time around (e.g. property ownership), you should include it in the second round.
 
heyven100 said:
We are going to submit our PR application, but my husband applied for a visitor visa for 4 months it got refused.
Main reasons were:

-families ties in canada and in country of residence
-purpose of visit
-travel history

He submitted stamps for visits, and provided family form, but only stated the purpose of the visit in the Letter of explanation.

I work for an airline, so we provided only sample of a staff ticket he will have, (did not provide return flight), and the purpose of the visit was to be with his wife for a short period.

Four months is not a "short period". What wedding party lasts 4 months? As Scylla mentioned, max 3 weeks.

In general CIC wants to see evidence that he is going back and everything suggests he is not.
 
Jalex23 said:
Four months is not a "short period". What wedding party lasts 4 months? As Scylla mentioned, max 3 weeks.

In general CIC wants to see evidence that he is going back and everything suggests he is not.

I think you misread my msgs and I feel mocked by your response, I said in first application we asked for 4 months.

Now we are re-applying and we will mention the purpose of the visit is to attend wedding party arranged by my parents. So looking for a one month or two weeks visa NOW.
 
scylla said:
Yes - it's generally more difficult to obtain a TRV if your spouse is Canadian since CIC often believes you have plans to remain in Canada long term and aren't a genuine visitor.

Requesting a four month visit was unfortunately a mistake since it demonstrates lack of ties to the home country. If you want to try reapplying, ask for 2-3 weeks maximum.

What evidence did your husband provide to show proof of ties to his home country? If there's anything he failed to include the first time around (e.g. property ownership), you should include it in the second round.

Thanks so much for your response/input -- it might be bit harder but we will still give it a shot, I read a thread about an applicant, same situation as me, who received a visitor visa while PR was being processed.
 
heyven100 said:
Thanks so much for your response/input -- it might be bit harder but we will still give it a shot, I read a thread about an applicant, same situation as me, who received a visitor visa while PR was being processed.
While I do not know which thread you're referring to.... the applicant in that thread was most probably approved for a TRV after his/her PR file was transferred + that applicant must have demonstrated strong reasons to return to his/her home country.

As scylla and Jalex23 have explained, keep the visit to 2-3 weeks max. + your husband must prove he has reasons to go back (and not remain in Canada while his PR app is filed/processed)