An outline of the spousal sponsorship process for spouses and common-law partners of Canadians who live in the Philippines.
The first step to sponsoring your spouse for Canadian immigration is to make sure you are eligible.
Are you a Canadian citizen, or permanent resident? Are you over the age of 18? Can you financially provide for your spouse, any dependent children, and yourself?
These are some of the basic questions that determine your eligibility. From here, things get a little more specific. For instance, you can sponsor your partner from outside Canada — but only if you have citizenship status. You also have to show in your application that you plan to settle in Canada when your spouse gets permanent residency status. Permanent residents cannot sponsor their spouse from outside of Canada.
Also, if you live in Quebec, you have meet eligibility requirements at the provincial level as well. You can find out exactly what these are at the Quebec government website.
Next comes the money talk. You cannot be receiving social assistance for reasons other than a disability. However, if you’re receiving maternity, parental, or sickness benefits, you may still be eligible to sponsor. Other benefits such as employment insurance and federal training allowances are not eligible sources of income.
In most cases, there is no minimum income cut off for sponsoring spouses, common-law partners, and children. There are very specific instances where you must meet a low-income-cut-off score, which are determined by the government each year. Generally, it only applies if the partner you’re sponsoring has a dependent child who also has a dependent child of their own.
What can make me ineligible to sponsor my spouse?
Certain circumstances could make you ineligible to sponsor. Beyond violent criminal offences, you could also be ineligible for non-criminal reasons. Perhaps you failed to pay an immigration loan, are going through bankruptcy and not discharged, or if you sponsored a previous spouse within three years of your application. These are just some of the factors that could affect your eligibility to sponsor.
Also, if you were a sponsored spouse now turned Canadian permanent resident, you cannot sponsor a new spouse within five years of your landing.
Once you determine that you are eligible, the next step is to make sure that your partner is admissible to Canada.
Is my spouse eligible to be sponsored?
Your spouse must be over the age of 18, and pass background, security, as well as medical checks.
The government department that processes immigration applications, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), will check to see that your spouse is admissible. People with criminal convictions are generally not allowed to come to Canada, but there may be options to overcome criminal inadmissibility.