Eight Things To Know About Canada’s Spousal Sponsorship Immigration Program

Eight Things To Know About Canada’s Spousal Sponsorship Immigration Program

Canada’s federal government says processing times for immigration applications for the spousal sponsorship program have returned to the published standard of 12 months in 2022.

Although many candidates report otherwise, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) says new applicants to the program will get a decision within a year.

Canada saw 64,340 new permanent residents arrive under spousal sponsorship immigration programs in 2021.

That’s in excess of 78 percent more new permanent residents under that pathway as came in all of 2020, the first year of the pandemic, when only 36,120 immigrants came to Canada under those programs.

The massive rebound in spousal sponsorship arrivals also marks a near return to normal in Canada for these programs that were responsible for the arrival of 64,775 new permanent residents in 2019, the last full year before the arrival of the coronavirus in Canada.

On Twitter, that frustration and even anger is evident in the tweets of many people who claim to have been waiting for up to four years for their spousal sponsorship applications to be approved by IRCC officials.

“My husband, an Iraqi national but very much Canadian, had to wait 2.5 years to be allowed to enter Canada although we have been married for 17 years,” tweeted one woman.

Immigration Minister Sean Fraser and his ministry have taken measures to speed up those processing times and return to service standards by clearing away the backlog that grew during the pandemic. But that will take time.

Despite those challenges, it’s clear the spousal sponsorship program is an increasingly popular route to permanent residency in Canada.

Here are the Eight Things To Know About Canada’s Spousal Sponsorship Immigration Program.

1. WHO CAN SPONSOR A SPOUSE OR COMMON-LAW PARTNER TO COME TO CANADA?

Anyone hoping to sponsor a spouse or common-law partner in Canada needs to be either a citizen or adult permanent resident of Canada capable of supporting him or herself financially and ensuring that spouse will not need social assistance from the government.

That means the sponsor must sign an undertaking, promising to give financial support for the basic needs of their spouse or partner and dependent children.

Those basic needs are defined as:

That undertaking is a binding promise of support. It is the sponsor’s responsibility to support the spouse or common-law wife for the length of the undertaking period even if the sponsor’s situation changes.

This agreement cannot be cancelled, even if:

Maternity, parental and sickness benefits paid under the Employment Insurance Act in Canada are all considered income and contribute to allowing a person to sponsor a spouse or common-law partner but other payments from the government, such as employment insurance and federal training allowances, are not considered income.

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2. HOW MUCH ARE THE FEES TO APPLY TO SPONSOR A SPOUSE OR COMMON-LAW PARTNER?

The sponsorship fee, principal applicant processing fee, and the right of permanent residence fee together add up to $1,050. Then, there’s the biometrics fee which is another $85 per person, bringing the total to $1,135.

Although the permanent residence fee, which by itself is $475, is not required to pay up front, IRCC officials recommend applicants include it in the initial application as failing to do so can slow down the process.

Residents of Quebec who are hoping to sponsor their spouses or common-law partners need to remember that province requires applicants to pay an additional fee of $301 and that this is paid to that provincial government, not to the IRCC.

Paying the fees for a spousal sponsorship application requires: