Free Book Consultation
Chat on WhatsApp +1 (905) 290-0870

Dependent Child Sponsorship Mississauga

Your child is waiting. The process does not have to be.

Thousands parents in Canada are separated from their children – not because there is no path, but because the process feels too complicated to start. Canadian citizens and permanent residents can sponsor their dependent child for permanent residence, with no income requirement in most cases. Our immigration lawyer in Mississauga, makes that process clear from the first conversation.

Licensed by Law Society of Ontario and CICC

Expertise in Family Sponsorship

Women-Led Practice

Years of Experience
0 +
Client Reviews
0
Service Paths
0
Licensed Professionals
0

DEPENDENT CHILD SPONSORSHIP AT A GLANCE

Key Facts

Who can sponsor

Canadian citizens, permanent residents, and registered Indians under the Indian Act

Minimum income requirement

None in most cases - exception applies if your child has dependent children of their own

Child's age cut-off

Under 22, unmarried, not in a common-law relationship - age is locked in on the date IRCC receives your complete application

Marital status

Must remain unmarried throughout the entire process - up to and including landing day

Refusal appeal rights

Yes - most refusals can be appealed to the Immigration Appeal Division

Child already in Canada

May be eligible for in-Canada processing - speak with our team to confirm

Who This Service Is For in Mississauga

Mississauga is home to large and established South Asian, Filipino, Caribbean, and Eastern European communities. Across all of them, the same pattern repeats: a parent immigrates first, builds stability in the city, then begins the process of reuniting their family. This service is for:

  • Mississauga PRs and citizens sponsoring a biological child still living abroad – the most common family sponsorship we handle in Peel Region
  • Parents sponsoring a child born outside Canada after the parent had already immigrated, including families where the parent was settled here for years before beginning this process
  • Blended families with step-children qualifying as dependent children under IRCC’s rules
  • Applicants approaching the age cutoff – children within three to four years of turning 22 who need timeline management to prevent aging out mid-process
  • Families with documentation challenges specific to their country of origin: unauthenticated Indian birth certificates, Philippine civil registry copies not sourced from the PSA, Jamaican records not from the Registrar General’s Department
  • Separated or divorced parents whose child sponsorship requires documented consent from the biological parent – a requirement that is frequently unknown until an application is refused
  • Applicants whose dependent child sponsorship was previously refused and who need a stronger reapplication

WHAT IS DEPENDENT CHILD SPONSORSHIP?

Canadian citizens and permanent residents can sponsor their dependent child for permanent residence through the Family Sponsorship Program offered by IPJ Immigration Solutions. Both applications – yours as sponsor and your child’s for permanent residence – are submitted together and processed as one package.

In most cases, there is no minimum income requirement.

Many parents arrive in Canada first, build stability, and plan to bring their child later. Sometimes the wait is longer than expected. Whatever your situation, this program exists to bring your family together.

DOES YOUR CHILD QUALIFY? THE AGE RULE MANY PARENTS MISS

Your child’s age is frozen on the date IRCC receives your complete application. Even if they turn 22 during processing, they remain eligible. What matters is filing a complete application on time.

Under 22

22 or Older

The Lock-In Date

If IRCC returns your application as incomplete, the lock-in date is lost. A child close to 22 could age out before you resubmit. This is why a complete, accurate first submission matters. Unlike age, marital status is not locked in at the time of application - your child must remain unmarried throughout the entire process, up to and including the day they become a permanent resident.

Consider what this looks like in a real situation: a Mississauga permanent resident from the Philippines sponsors her 19-year-old son. The standard processing time is around 15 months. He turns 22 in 16 months. If any delay occurs - a document rejected for wrong sourcing, an IRCC request for information, a medical exam that needs to be rescheduled - he ages out mid-processing and loses eligibility permanently. Age cutoff planning starts before the application is filed.

Unlike age, marital status is not locked in at the time of application. Your child must remain unmarried throughout the entire process, up to and including the day they become a permanent resident.

Already a Canadian Citizen?

Children born outside Canada to a Canadian citizen parent may already hold citizenship by descent - but only if that Canadian citizen parent was themselves born in Canada or naturalized before the child was born. If the Canadian citizen parent was also born outside Canada, the first-generation limit may mean the child does not automatically acquire citizenship. Confirm your child's status before filing. A citizen cannot be sponsored. We can help you check.

Why This Matters for Mississauga Applicants

The most preventable cause of dependent child sponsorship delays is not a complex legal question. It is a documentation sourcing error that could have been caught before the application was filed.

Birth certificate authentication differs sharply by country – and the errors are consistent:

  • India: Birth certificates must be authenticated through the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) apostille process. A certificate from the local municipal office – even if it looks official – is not accepted by IRCC. Families from Mississauga’s South Asian community who submit unauthenticated Indian documents regularly face four-month delays while correct authentication is obtained. A professional document review at the start identifies this in the first consultation.

  • Philippines: The Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) is the only accepted source for birth certificates. Local civil registry copies – even ones that appear identical – are not accepted. This is the single most common documentation error in Filipino dependent child sponsorships. The PSA sourcing requirement is non-negotiable, and it is frequently unknown to sponsors handling their own application.

  • Jamaica: Birth certificates must be sourced from the Registrar General’s Department. Custody documentation for children from separated parents requires specific notarization. A Mississauga sponsor from Jamaica wanting to bring his daughter from a previous marriage also needs documented consent from the biological mother – a specific IRCC form that must be notarized. Without it, the application is automatically refused. The biological mother may be entirely cooperative. The form requirement just was not known.

  • Pakistan: NADRA-verified documents are required. Custody and guardianship documentation from prior marriages requires specific notarization steps not captured in standard government checklists.

  • Eastern Europe (Poland, Ukraine): Documents are generally well-accepted but require certified English translation. We map the translation requirements alongside the document list so nothing is submitted without its language verification.

We build a document map specific to your child’s country of birth before the first document is gathered. No assumptions. No generic checklist.

WHAT YOU NEED TO QUALIFY AND APPLY

Sponsor Requirements

  • Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or registered under the Indian Act
  • At least 18 years old
  • Living in Canada – citizens abroad must show genuine intent to return
  • Not receiving social assistance, except for disability
  • No default on a previous sponsorship undertaking

Permanent residents living outside Canada cannot sponsor.

Quebec residents: confirm provincial requirements with your provincial authority before submitting, as Quebec has its own immigration processes that may apply.

Documents You Need

Your Side

  • Proof of citizenship or permanent residence
  • Government-issued ID
  • Proof of Canadian address
  • Completed Form IMM 5289

Your Child's Side

  • Birth certificate – primary proof of relationship
  • Valid passport
  • Immigration medical exam
  • Biometrics – ages 14 to 79
  • Police certificates – age 18 and up, if lived outside Canada six or more months

Other Parent Consent

  • If your child is a minor immigrating without one parent, consent is usually required.
  • Submit Form IMM 5604 (Declaration from Non-Accompanying Parent/Guardian).
  • Additional documents may include,Custody agreements,Court orders,Death certificates
  • If the other parent is unreachable, refuses consent, or documents are unavailable, alternative solutions may be possible.

THE APPLICATION PROCESS, STEP BY STEP

Prepare The Document

Confirm eligibility, gather documents,. Declare all family members in the application, including children not immigrating now. Failing to declare a child can affect their ability to be sponsored later.

Submit The Document

Complete and submit both the sponsorship application and the permanent residence application through IRCC's PR Portal. Pay government fees at this stage.

Acknowledgement of Receipt

IRCC confirms receipt and issues an application number. Tracking starts here.

IRCC Processing

Background and security checks, medical review, and possible requests for additional documents. Respond to any IRCC request promptly. Processing times are estimates and may change - check IRCC's official tool for current figures.

Decision and Landing

IRCC issues a Confirmation of Permanent Residence (COPR). Your child arrives in Canada - for many Mississauga families, stepping off a flight at Pearson International Airport as a permanent resident for the first time. From landing day, they can live, work, and study here. Children enroll in Peel District School Board or Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board schools and become OHIP-eligible immediately - with access to Trillium Health Partners and Credit Valley Hospital for families in Mississauga and the broader Peel Region. The wait is over.

WHY APPLICATIONS GET REFUSED AND HOW TO AVOID IT

Most refusals are preventable. These are the most common reasons:

Incomplete Application

Missing forms, wrong form version, unsigned fields, or missing fees. IRCC returns the file and the lock-in date is lost.

Undeclared Family Members

Every child must be listed in your application, even if they are not immigrating. This is one of the most serious and avoidable errors.

Wrong Birth Certificate Source

A certificate that is unauthenticated, sourced from the wrong authority, untranslated, or has name discrepancies causes delays and returns. For Indian, Filipino, Jamaican, and Pakistani documents, the issuing authority matters as much as the document itself.

Missing Parent Consent

Form IMM 5604 absent or incorrectly completed when a minor is immigrating without one parent.

Child Aged Out

The lock-in date was lost because the original application came back incomplete. Our legal review catches every gap before you submit.

COMPLEX SITUATIONS For depended child sponsorship

International adoption follows a separate IRCC process. The adoption must be legally finalized under both countries' laws. Speak with us before filing to ensure you are using the correct application stream. [Learn more about adopted child sponsorship in Mississauga

That grandchild must be declared in the application whether or not they are coming to Canada. Minimum income requirements may apply based on family size.

If your child is already in Canada on a study permit, visitor visa, or other temporary status, in-Canada processing may be available depending on your circumstances. Contact our team to confirm the right approach before filing.

 Most dependent child sponsorship refusals can be appealed to the Immigration Appeal Division. If your application has already been refused, contact our team to assess your options and the strength of a potential appeal. If the refusal involved a misrepresentation concern or a procedural fairness letter, our immigration lawyer's involvement from the start of the new application is strongly recommended.

Professional Fee Schedule

We believe pricing should be honest, transparent, and stress-free. That’s why we don’t charge by the hour or burden you with unexpected fees. Before any work begins, you’ll receive a clear, written agreement outlining exactly what’s included. No guesswork, no surprises – just a straightforward deal you can count on.

What Our Services Include

Every applicant’s situation is different. Some clients want expert support while staying in control of their own application. Others want a team to manage everything.

Guided Application Review - You Prepare, We Review

Perfect if you are comfortable managing your own application but want a licensed professional team to verify your NOC, check your hours calculation, review your reference letters, and audit your full post-ITA package before submission.

What's included

Best for hands-on applicants who want expert verification before submitting. Full fee credited if upgraded to Full Care before submission.

Full Care Representation - We Handle Everything

Ideal for workers with complex situations – such as a borderline NOC, multiple employers, an expiring permit, or a previous refusal – or for anyone who wants complete peace of mind. You share your documents and your story. We take care of the rest.

What's included

Best for complex cases, expiring permits, previous refusals, or anyone who wants complete peace of mind.

Upgrading to Full Care Representation: Start with a Guided Application Review and decide to upgrade to Full Care before your application is submitted? We will credit the full amount you have already paid toward your new fee.

Why Choose IPJ For dependent child sponsorship

Why Clients Choose IPJ Immigration Solutions

Two Decades of Ontario Experience

We have been handling family sponsorship files through every policy change Canada has made. You are not getting someone learning how to sponsor a dependent child on your file.

We Have Been Where You Are

Helping a dependent child immigrate to Canada isn't just paperwork - it's one of the most consequential steps your family will take. Every document, every deadline, every officer's note carries real weight. We understand that, because we've sat exactly where you're sitting.

RCIC and Lawyer Combination

CICC-licensed RCICs and an immigration lawyer licensed by the Law Society of Ontario - JD from Osgoode Hall, with Federal Court capability if your child's sponsorship file ever faces a refusal or complication.

Meticulous Attention to Detail

Most families who come to us after a refusal were eligible. The child qualified. The relationship was genuine. The sponsor had the means. The application failed because of what was in the paperwork or what wasn't. Eligibility and a successful application are not the same thing.

You Are Not Just a File Number

Most immigration firms separate intake from case management from document review from follow-up. By the time your file reaches submission, it has passed through several sets of hands - and no single person has read all of it. That is where details fall through.

Success With Difficult Cases

Custody arrangements after separation. A child approaching the age-out threshold. A prior refusal that was never properly explained. Medical inadmissibility that no one flagged the first time around. These are not edge cases - they are the situations families face, and they require more than a standard application template.

What Our Clients Say

Our clients come to us from across Richmond Hill and the wider Greater Toronto Area, including Markham, Vaughan, Toronto, and Mississauga. Their words reflect what we work to deliver on every file: clarity, honest guidance, and real results.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Yes, if you are a Canadian citizen or permanent resident and your child meets IRCC's definition of a dependent child. We confirm eligibility, identify the specific documentation requirements based on your child's country of birth, and prepare the full sponsorship file including custody documentation if applicable.

Your child must be under 22 at the time the application is submitted and not married or common-law. The age is locked in on the date IRCC receives your complete application - if the application is returned as incomplete, that lock-in date is lost. If your child is within three to four years of turning 22, we assess the full processing timeline carefully before the application is filed.

 Core documents include the birth certificate from the correct issuing authority for the child's country of birth, proof of your relationship, the child's current passport, custody and consent documentation if applicable, and proof of your own status in Canada. For Indian, Filipino, Jamaican, and Pakistani applicants, authentication steps are specific - we map these at the first consultation, not after something is rejected.

 None in most cases. The only exception is if your sponsored child has dependent children of their own, in which case minimum income requirements may apply based on family size.

A public policy valid until September 10, 2026 may still allow sponsorship. Verify the current status of this policy and book a consultation to check whether you qualify before the deadline.

Yes, in most cases. Form IMM 5604 is required when a minor immigrates without one parent. Alternatives exist if that parent is unreachable or if a death certificate cannot be obtained. Each case is different - speak with our team before filing.

Approximately 15 to 18 months. Check IRCC's official processing times tool for current estimates, as timelines change. If your child is approaching the age cutoff, timeline planning starts before anything is submitted.

 

In some circumstances, yes. If your child is currently in Canada on a study permit, visitor visa, or other temporary status, in-Canada processing may be available. Contact our team to confirm whether this applies to your situation.

Yes. We review the refusal letter to identify the specific ground and build a stronger reapplication. If the refusal involved a misrepresentation concern or a procedural fairness letter, our immigration lawyer's involvement from the start of the new application is strongly recommended.

Your Next Step Starts Here

Canada continues to prioritize family reunification through its sponsorship programs. The sooner you prepare and submit a complete application to sponsor your dependent child, the sooner they can begin the process of joining you in Canada through our team.

✓ RCIC and Law Society Regulated   ✓ Confidential   ✓ No Commitment Required   ✓ Response Within 1 Business Day

Free 15-Minute Discovery Call

Not sure if your child qualifies as a dependent or if you meet the sponsorship requirements? In this short call, we review your status, your child’s eligibility, and key documents then provide clear, honest guidance on your options

Paid 45-Minute Consultation

Already planning to sponsor your dependent child but unsure about age cutoffs, full-time student eligibility, documents, or timelines? In this focused session, we review your situation and outline a clear strategy, whether you are preparing your application, responding to IRCC requests, or handling a complication.

READY TO START?

Answer a few quick questions about your relationship, residency status, and your child’s details. A licensed immigration consultant will review your responses and get back to you within 24 hours with a clear, honest assessment of your eligibility to sponsor a dependent child to Canada, along with the best next steps for your application.

Service Areas

Areas we Serve

Complete a short questionnaire to help us understand your comfort level, your timeline, and the complexity of your situation. A licensed consultant will review your answers and get back to you within 24 hours with a clear, personalized recommendation.