Global Visa Firm

(Grand) Parents Sponsorship

Parents / Grand Parents Sponsorship / PGP

Index

Introduction

Parents/Grand Parents Sponsorship is called Parents/Grand Parents Sponsorship. Canadian citizens or permanent residents who are over 19 years old are eligible to sponsor their parents and grandparents to apply for Canadian permanent resident status. Parents reunited immigrants will be open to submit applications for immigration purposes on October 13, 2020, with an estimated quota of 10,000. There are expected to be 30,000 places in 2021. IRCC selection time is to be determined.

In 2020, parents’ reunion immigration will no longer be reviewed in the order of submission, but instead will be randomly drawn. Applicants need to fill out an online form to express their willingness to reunite. The Immigration Bureau will randomly select and invite applicants to submit complete materials.

But in any case, for clients applying for parental reunification, the minimum income requirement remains unchanged. According to the size of the family, the guarantor needs to meet the income standard in the three years before the application, including each year during the immigration process. At the same time, as long as the spouse is willing to sign together, the income can be combined.


Requirements

Income Requirements

If the sponsor lives outside of Quebec, the income of each year including the immigration process must be at least 1.3 times the Canadian Low income cut-offs (LICO) in the 3 years before the application. Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, there is no need to increase by 30% in 2020.

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

2015

2 persons

32,270

41,007

40,379

39,813

39,371

38,618

3 persons

39,672

50,414

49,641

48,945

48,404

47,476

4 persons

48,167

61,209

60,271

59,426

58,768

57,642

5 persons

54,630

69,423

68,358

67,400

66,654

65,377

6 persons

61,613

78,296

77,095

76,015

75,174

73,733

7 persons

68,598

87,172

85,835

84,631

83,695

82,091

If more than 7 persons, for each additional person, add

6,985

8,876

8,740

8,616

8,522

8,358


Submission Method

According to the experience in 2019, paper applications need to be mailed to CPC-Ottawa. After that, if the applicant lives in China, the case will be transferred to Hong Kong.

Parent/grandparent reunion immigration currently only accepts paper applications.


Documents Checklist

  • The sponsor needs to provide a photocopy of any of the following materials: a double-sided copy of the PR Card, or immigration paper (IMM 1000), or a permanent residence confirmation document (IMM 5292 or IMM 5688); or a Canadian citizenship certificate (double-sided copy); Or Canadian birth certificate; or Canadian passport homepage;
  • If the spouse is a joint sponsor, a copy of the marriage certificate is required;
  • If the spouse is a joint sponsor, the materials in 1 are also required;
  • Documents to prove the relationship between the sponsor and the applicant: a copy of the sponsor’s birth certificate; if you are sponsoring the parents of the parents, a copy of the parents’ birth certificate is required;
  • Provide the original tax forms for the most recent 3 tax years (just print them out). It can be obtained free of charge from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). If it cannot be provided, a separate explanation letter is required;
  • Copy of the first page of the passport of the applicant and accompanying persons;
  • Marriage certificate or cohabitation declaration of the main applicant and accompanying spouse (IMM 5409);
  • Proof of the relationship between the principal application and the accompanying dependent children;
  • Birth certificates of all accompanying children.

Q&A

Q: How to calculate the family population?

A: The income requirement of the sponsor is determined according to the number of members in each household. example:
Number of sponsor’s family: 2 couples + 1 child = 3
Number of parents who need to immigrate: Both spouses’ parents need to be sponsored = 2 + 2 = 4
Number of family members = number of sponsor’s family + number of sponsored parents = 3 people + 4 people = 7 people

Q: If the parents are divorced, how to calculate the family size?

A: Suppose you are married and have 1 child. After your parents divorced, the mother formed a new family with 1 spouse, and the father did not form a new family and was single.
If you want to only sponsor your mother, the total population of your family is 5, regardless of whether your mother’s spouse needs to come to Canada.
If you only want to sponsor the father, your family size is 4. If you want to sponsor both the mother and the father, the total family size is 6.

Q: My parents are married, but my father does not want to come to Canada. Only my mother comes to Canada. What is the family size?

A: If the parents are married, regardless of whether one of them comes to Canada or not, the calculation of the family population must include both father and mother.

Q: How long is the application processing time?

A: Currently, the official processing time announced by the Immigration Office is roughly 20-24 months. According to the latest notice issued by the Immigration Bureau, the Immigration Bureau will work to increase the processing speed of this category, so the processing time will be further shortened in the future.

Q: What is the latest income requirement? How to confirm whether the income meets the standard?

A: Sponsors who intend to apply in 2020 need to meet the income requirements for three consecutive years in 2017, 2018 and 2019. However, the Immigration Office has the right to request to view the income of 2020. So how to determine whether the income meets the standard, the sponsor needs to check the total income before tax (Line 150) of the Notice of Assessment for the past three years. If the couples pledge together, you can add up the income and check whether the total family income meets the standard for three consecutive years. When calculating the total income, the provincial government training program allowances, provincial government social relief, government resettlement financial subsidies, EI unemployment insurance payments, and old age allowances applied by the sponsor are not included in income and need to be deducted. At the same time, according to the Low Income Cut-off (LICO) required by the Canadian government for temporary residents in 2019


Fees


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