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Family Sponsorship Mississauga

Reunite with Your Loved Ones

Mississauga is a family-focused immigration community where sponsorship applications require careful legal and cultural documentation. Families across Erin Mills, Streetsville, Churchill Meadows, and Port Credit use sponsorship programs to reunite with loved ones abroad. Whether sponsoring a spouse, parent, or grandparent, applicants must meet strict evidence and relationship requirements under Canadian immigration law. Our immigration lawyer in Mississauga helps make the process clear, accurate, and stress-free from start to finish.

20+ Years Experience

Licensed by Law Society & CICC

Women-Led Immigration Practice

UNDERSTANDING FAMILY SPONSORSHIP

In Mississauga specifically, family sponsorship reflects a city where 51.8% of Peel Region’s population are immigrants – and where multi-generational households, parents helping raise grandchildren, and spouses waiting abroad are everyday realities. The demand for family reunification here is not abstract. It is the reason our office at IPJ Immigration Solutions on Dundas Street West receives more spousal, parent, and child sponsorship inquiries than almost any other immigration service type.

Retain all existing factual content about the legal framework, undertaking commitments, and the two-application structure.

Who This Is For in Mississauga

Family sponsorship in Mississauga covers a wide range of situations. We regularly work with:

Mississauga permanent residents and citizens sponsoring a spouse – whether in Canada (inland sponsorship, with an open work permit available simultaneously) or still abroad (outland sponsorship, often faster overall). This includes cases involving arranged marriages, large age gaps, short courtship timelines, or prior refusals, where the relationship is completely genuine but the documentation does not show it clearly enough.

Families in Erin Mills, Churchill Meadows, and Streetsville who want their parents here permanently – not just on extended visits. We also prepare Super Visa applications for families waiting on the PGP intake window, or for those who need parents present for childcare, family events, or cultural milestones in the near term.

 Sponsors reuniting with children who were left behind when they immigrated, or completing adoptions that involve international legal processes. Children who gain permanent residence here become eligible to enroll with the Peel District School Board or the Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board, and to access care through Trillium Health Partners – practical milestones that follow directly from a successful sponsorship.

Sponsors with previous refusals, sponsors who are unsure whether they meet the Minimum Necessary Income (MNI) threshold, or sponsored persons with inadmissibility concerns, prior marriages, or incomplete civil documentation.

 South Asian families requiring MEA apostilles (India) or Nadra verification (Pakistan). Filipino families whose documents must come from the Philippine Statistics Authority, not local civil registries. Caribbean applicants whose marriage certificates must be authenticated by Jamaica’s Registrar General’s Department. Eastern European applicants whose documents require certified English translation. These are not theoretical concerns – they are among the most frequent causes of delays and refusals we see in Mississauga files.

Why This Matters for Mississauga Applicants

Mississauga generates some of Ontario’s highest family sponsorship volumes. The communities that make up this city – South Asian families with deep roots in countries like India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka; Filipino families; Caribbean families; Eastern European families – are among the most active sponsorship applicants in Peel Region.

That volume brings a specific set of risks.

Spousal and partner sponsorship clients: Mississauga permanent residents and citizens sponsoring a spouse – whether in Canada (inland sponsorship, with an open work permit available simultaneously) or still abroad (outland sponsorship, often faster overall). This includes cases involving arranged marriages, large age gaps, short courtship timelines, or prior refusals, where the relationship is completely genuine but the documentation does not show it clearly enough.

Parent and Grandparent Program (PGP) applicants: Families in Erin Mills, Churchill Meadows, and Streetsville who want their parents here permanently – not just on extended visits. We also prepare Super Visa applications for families waiting on the PGP intake window, or for those who need parents present for childcare, family events, or cultural milestones in the near term.

Dependent children and adopted children: Sponsors reuniting with children who were left behind when they immigrated, or completing adoptions that involve international legal processes. Children who gain permanent residence here become eligible to enroll with the Peel District School Board or the Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board, and to access care through Trillium Health Partners – practical milestones that follow directly from a successful sponsorship.

Applicants with complex situations: Sponsors with previous refusals, sponsors who are unsure whether they meet the Minimum Necessary Income (MNI) threshold, or sponsored persons with inadmissibility concerns, prior marriages, or incomplete civil documentation.

Families from countries with specific authentication requirements: South Asian families requiring MEA apostilles (India) or Nadra verification (Pakistan). Filipino families whose documents must come from the Philippine Statistics Authority, not local civil registries. Caribbean applicants whose marriage certificates must be authenticated by Jamaica’s Registrar General’s Department. Eastern European applicants whose documents require certified English translation. These are not theoretical concerns – they are among the most frequent causes of delays and refusals we see in Mississauga files.

Mississauga FAMILY SPONSORSHIP

In Mississauga, both options are common. Inland sponsorship suits couples already living together in the city – a spousal open work permit means the sponsored partner can work legally, including in Mississauga’s corporate sector or with one of the many employers in the Airport Corporate Centre, while waiting for the permanent residence decision. Outland sponsorship is the strategic choice when travel flexibility matters or when the application has complicating factors where appeal rights make a meaningful difference.

Sponsor your spouse, common-law partner, or conjugal partner to become a Canadian permanent resident.

Who you can sponsor:

Spouse: A person you’re legally married to. Your marriage must be legally valid in the country where it took place and under Canadian law.

Common-Law Partner: A person you’ve been living with in a conjugal relationship for at least 12 continuous months. You don’t need to be legally married, but you must have cohabited for the full 12 months.

Conjugal Partner: A person you’ve been in a committed relationship with for at least 12 months but couldn’t live together or get married due to circumstances beyond your control (e.g., immigration barriers, marital status restrictions in their country). This category has strict requirements and is typically used when the first two options aren’t available.

Key requirements:

  • Both sponsor and sponsored partner must be at least 18 years old
  • Your relationship must be genuine (not entered into primarily for immigration purposes)
  • You cannot sponsor someone if you were sponsored as a spouse/partner yourself within the last five years

Two Application Options:

Inland Sponsorship (Spouse or Common-Law Partner in Canada):

  • Both sponsor and sponsored partner must be living together in Canada
  • Sponsored partner may be eligible for an open work permit while the application is processed
  • Cannot appeal if refused (but can request judicial review)
  • Average processing time: 21 months

IRCC processing times are estimates and may change at any time.

Outland Sponsorship (Spouse or Partner Outside Canada):

  • Can be used even if your partner is currently in Canada (as a visitor)
  • Sponsored partner can travel during processing
  • Can appeal to Immigration Appeal Division if refused
  • Average processing time: 15 months

IRCC processing times are estimates and may change at any time.

The Super Visa is exceptionally popular among Mississauga families. It allows parents and grandparents to stay for up to five years per entry, with multiple entries valid over a 10-year period - practical for families in Streetsville, Churchill Meadows, or Erin Mills who want parents present for extended childcare or family events. However, it requires private Canadian health insurance from a Canadian provider with a minimum of $100,000 in coverage. This insurance requirement is the most common application error we see in Super Visa files, particularly among Chinese and Filipino families applying for the first time. We prepare complete Super Visa packages.

 

Who you can sponsor:

  • Your mother or father
  • Your grandparents
  • Your spouse’s or partner’s parents or grandparents (if you’re sponsoring them together)

Key requirements:

For Sponsors:

  • Must meet minimum necessary income (MNI) requirements for the past three consecutive years
  • Income must meet or exceed Low Income Cut-Off (LICO) + 30%
  • Must sign an undertaking to financially support your parents/grandparents for 20 years

Income Requirements (2026 LICO + 30%): Your total household size includes you, your co-signer (if any), dependent children, sponsored relatives still under undertaking, and the family members you’re sponsoring.

Example: To sponsor 2 parents (family size of 4, including you and your spouse):

Required annual income: Approximately $70,000+ for the past 3 years

Application Process: IRCC typically opens a limited intake period each year. You must submit an Interest to Sponsor form during that window. If selected randomly, you’ll be invited to submit a complete application.

Super Visa Alternative: If you don’t meet income requirements or want to bring your parents sooner, consider the Super Visa, which allows visits of up to 5 years at a time but doesn’t provide permanent residence.

Processing time: 30+ months (varies significantly)

IRCC processing times are estimates and may change at any time.

Once landed, sponsored children in Mississauga can enroll with the Peel District School Board or the Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board. The landing process triggers this eligibility immediately - one of the most immediate practical benefits for families waiting through this process.

 

Who qualifies as a dependent child:

Children under 22: Your biological or adopted child who is under 22 years old and doesn’t have a spouse or common-law partner.

Children 22 or older: Your child who is 22 or older and has depended substantially on your financial support since before age 22 due to a physical or mental condition.

Key requirements:

  • Proof of parent-child relationship (birth certificate, adoption papers)
  • If the child has another parent who isn’t coming to Canada, you need their consent
  • Child must pass medical and security checks

Adopted Children: If you’re sponsoring an adopted child, the adoption must be legally valid, and you must meet specific requirements that vary depending on the adoption’s location and circumstances.

Processing time: 15-18 months

IRCC processing times are estimates and may change at any time.

In limited circumstances, you may sponsor other relatives such as siblings, nieces, nephews, or other family members.

Who you can sponsor:

Orphaned relatives: Brothers, sisters, nephews, nieces, or grandchildren who are orphaned, under 18, and not married or in a common-law relationship.

Any relative (if you have no other family): If you don’t have a spouse, partner, child, parent, grandparent, or sibling who is a Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or registered Indian under the Canadian Indian Act, you may sponsor one relative of any age or relationship.

These categories have very specific requirements and limited applicability.

Not Sure Which Category Applies to Your Situation?

Every family’s circumstances are unique. We’ll help you determine which sponsorship category fits your situation and whether you meet all eligibility requirements.

FAMILY SPONSOR ELIGIBILITY REQUIREMENTS

As the sponsor, you must meet specific eligibility requirements to sponsor a family member for permanent residence.

Basic Sponsor Requirements:

You must be:

  • A Canadian citizen, OR
  • A Canadian permanent resident, OR
  • A person registered in Canada as an Indian under the Canadian Indian Act

If you’re a Canadian citizen living outside Canada: You can sponsor your spouse, partner, or dependent children as long as you show you’ll live in Canada once they become permanent residents.

If you’re a permanent resident: You must be living in Canada when you submit your sponsorship application and throughout the process.

You must be at least 18 years old.

You must not be:

  • In prison, charged with a serious offence, or bankrupt
  • Receiving social assistance for reasons other than a disability
  • In default of any previous sponsorship undertakings, immigration loans, or court-ordered support payments
  • Convicted of a violent criminal offence, any offence against a relative, or any sexual offence inside or outside Canada

Previous Sponsorship Restrictions:

Five-Year Bar: If you were sponsored as a spouse or partner and became a permanent resident, you cannot sponsor a new spouse or partner for five years from the date you became a PR.

Default on Previous Undertakings: If you previously sponsored someone and defaulted on your financial obligations, you cannot sponsor again until you’ve fully repaid the debt to the government.

Spousal and Dependent Children Sponsorships: No minimum income requirement. However, you must show that you can provide for your basic needs and aren’t receiving social assistance (except disability).

Parent and Grandparent Sponsorships: Must meet minimum necessary income (LICO + 30%) for the past three consecutive years. This is a strict requirement with no exceptions.

The Undertaking Commitment:

When you sponsor a family member, you sign an undertaking - a legal promise to financially support them and ensure they don’t need social assistance.

Undertaking Periods:

  • Spouse/partner: 3 years from when they become a PR
  • Dependent children under 22: 10 years or until they turn 25 (whichever comes first)
  • Dependent children 22 or older: 3 years
  • Parents/grandparents: 20 years
  • Other relatives: 10 years or until they turn 25 (whichever is longer)

This is a legally binding commitment. If the person you sponsor receives social assistance during the undertaking period, you must repay the government - even if your circumstances change (separation, divorce, financial hardship).

For parent and grandparent sponsorships, you may include a co-signer to help you meet the income requirement.

Who can co-sign:

  • Your spouse or common-law partner (whether they’re Canadian or not)

The co-signer must also meet all sponsor eligibility requirements and sign the same undertaking commitment.

PROVING YOUR RELATIONSHIP

The Most Critical Part of Spousal Sponsorship

For spousal sponsorship files originating in Mississauga, we see a consistent pattern: genuine relationships that are poorly documented. This is not unique to any one community, but it is especially common in arranged marriage files involving South Asian families, where a marriage certificate, a few photographs, and a brief personal statement are submitted as the full evidence package. These are real marriages. The application does not show that – and IRCC officers have no cultural context to fill the gap. A well-constructed evidence package tells the full story of your relationship: how you met, how you stayed connected, how your families are involved, what your shared future looks like. That narrative is what distinguishes a well-prepared Mississauga file from a generic one.

What IRCC Looks For:

Your relationship must be real, not a marriage or partnership of convenience for immigration purposes.

  • History of your relationship (how you met, relationship timeline)
  • Communication records (emails, messages, call logs — particularly for long-distance relationships)
  • Proof of cohabitation (if applicable)
  • Financial interdependence (joint accounts, shared expenses)
  • Social recognition of relationship (photos with family/friends, travel together)
  • Commitment and future plans
  • Large age gaps between partners
  • Significant cultural or religious differences without explanation
  • Short courtship periods before marriage
  • Little communication or time spent together
  • Previous failed sponsorship applications
  • Sponsor has sponsored multiple previous spouses
  • Lack of knowledge about each other’s basic information
  • Evidence of separate lives (separate residences, no joint finances)

Types of Evidence to Include:

  • Wedding photos, engagement photos, relationship photos over time
  • Relationship timeline and story (how you met, relationship milestones)
  • Communication records (if long-distance or before living together)
  • Photos with each other’s families
  • Travel records together
  • Affidavits from family and friends
  • Marriage certificate
  • Wedding photos and videos
  • Proof of wedding ceremony (venue contracts, invitations)
  • Proof of 12 continuous months of cohabitation (lease agreements, utility bills, mail addressed to both at the same address)
  • Joint bank accounts or shared financial documents
  • Joint ownership of property or assets
  • Detailed explanation of why you couldn’t marry or live together
  • Evidence of significant barriers (immigration refusals, legal restrictions in home country)
  • Evidence of attempts to overcome barriers
  • Evidence of an ongoing committed relationship despite physical separation

Our Experience Makes the Difference:

We’ve seen countless applications; we know which evidence strengthens your case and which gaps might raise concerns. We help you compile a comprehensive, well-organized evidence package that tells your relationship story convincingly.

INLAND VS. OUTLAND SPOUSAL SPONSORSHIP Mississauga

Choosing the Right Application Stream

For Mississauga couples specifically, the outland option is worth considering even when the sponsored partner is already in the city on a visitor visa. Faster processing times and the ability to appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division if the application is refused make outland the strategically stronger choice for files that involve any scrutiny factor – a large age gap, a short courtship, a prior marriage, or documentation gaps. We walk through this decision with every spousal sponsorship client before any forms are filed.

Requirements:

  • Both sponsor and sponsored partner must be living together in Canada
  • Sponsored partner must have legal status in Canada (visitor, student, worker) or be eligible for status restoration
  • Both must remain in Canada throughout the application process

Advantages:

  • Sponsored partner can apply for an open work permit at the same time (if they have valid status)
  • Work permit typically approved within 4-6 months
  • May feel more secure being together in Canada during processing

Disadvantages:

  • Sponsored partner cannot travel outside Canada during processing (may lose application)
  • Cannot appeal if refused — only option is judicial review in Federal Court
  • Must maintain legal status throughout (extensions may be needed)

Best for:

  • Couples already living together in Canada
  • Sponsored partner wants to work in Canada during processing
  • Sponsored partner doesn’t need to travel during processing

Processing time: Approximately 21 months

IRCC processing times are estimates and may change at any time.

Requirements:

  • Sponsored partner lives outside Canada OR is temporarily in Canada as a visitor

Advantages:

  • Sponsored partner can travel freely during processing
  • Can appeal to Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) if refused
  • No requirement to maintain status in Canada
  • Can be used even if sponsored partner is currently visiting Canada

Disadvantages:

  • No automatic work permit option
  • May require an interview at the visa office in sponsored partner’s country

Best for:

  • Sponsored partner living outside Canada
  • Sponsored partner needs travel flexibility
  • Want the option to appeal if refused
  • Relationship or application has potential complications where appeal rights matter

Processing time: Approximately 15 months

IRCC processing times are estimates and may change at any time.

Choose Inland if:

  • Your partner is in Canada with valid status
  • They want to work while waiting
  • They don’t need to travel outside Canada
  • Your case is straightforward with strong relationship evidence

Choose Outland if:

  • Your partner is outside Canada
  • Travel flexibility is important
  • You want appeal rights if refused
  • Your case has complicating factors (age gap, previous refusals, etc.)

Important: Even if your partner is in Canada, you can still apply for Outland. Many couples in Canada choose Outland for the appeal rights and faster processing times.

We help you weigh the pros and cons based on your specific situation and choose the strategy that gives you the best outcome.

THE FAMILY SPONSORSHIP Mississauga PROCESS

Step-by-Step: From Application to Approval

For Mississauga clients whose documents originate from India, Pakistan, the Philippines, Jamaica, or other countries with specific authentication requirements, we provide country-specific document checklists that identify the exact source and format IRCC requires – before you request or pay for any documents. This prevents the single most common cause of processing delay we see in local files.

What Happens: You and your sponsored family member gather all required documents, complete forms, and compile evidence.

Key Tasks:

  • Confirm eligibility (sponsor and sponsored person)
  • Gather identity documents (passports, birth certificates, marriage certificates)
  • Compile relationship evidence (for spousal sponsorships)
  • Obtain police certificates
  • Complete medical examinations
  • Gather financial documents (for parent/grandparent sponsorships)
  • Collect supporting documents specific to your category

Our Role: We provide detailed checklists, review documents for completeness, guide evidence gathering, and help with any complex documentation issues.

What Happens: All forms are completed, application package is assembled, and submitted to IRCC.

Key Tasks:

  • Complete all required forms accurately
  • Write any required explanations or statements
  • Organize documents logically
  • Pay government fees
  • Submit application through the appropriate channel (online portal or paper)

Our Role (Guided Application Review): Review completed application, verify all documents are included, ensure forms are accurate, provide the final checklist.

Our Role (Full Care Representation): Complete all forms, organize the entire package, submit application on your behalf as your authorized representative.

What Happens: IRCC acknowledges receipt of your application and provides application numbers.

What to Expect:

  • Acknowledgement of Receipt (AOR) letter or email
  • Application number for tracking
  • Confirmation that application is complete (or request for missing items if incomplete)

For Inland Spousal Sponsorships: If an open work permit was requested, a work permit may be approved during this phase (typically 4-6 months).

What Happens: IRCC reviews your application, conducts background checks, and may request additional information.

Possible Steps:

  • Background and security checks
  • Review of relationship evidence (spousal applications)
  • Verification of sponsor’s eligibility
  • Review of financial documents (parent/grandparent applications)
  • Requests for additional information or documentation
  • Interview (if required — more common for spousal applications with concerns)
  • Medical examination review

Processing Times (Approximate):

  • Spousal/Partner (Inland): 21 months
  • Spousal/Partner (Outland): 15 months (varies significantly by country)
  • Dependent Children: 15-18 months
  • Parents/Grandparents: 24+ months

Our Role: Monitor application status, respond to IRCC requests promptly, provide additional documentation as needed, prepare you for interviews if required (Full Care Representation).

What Happens: IRCC makes a decision on your application. If approved, your family member becomes a permanent resident.

For Approvals:

If sponsored person is outside Canada: They receive Confirmation of Permanent Residence (COPR) and must “land” in Canada (arrive at the port of entry, complete the landing process).

If sponsored person is in Canada (Inland application): They receive COPR and complete the landing process within Canada (either virtual landing or appointment at IRCC office).

After Landing:

  • PR card application automatically initiated
  • PR card mailed to Canadian address within 8 weeks
  • Permanent resident rights begin immediately

For Refusals: You receive a detailed refusal letter explaining the reasons. Options may include:

  • Appeal to Immigration Appeal Division (Outland spousal applications only)
  • Judicial review in Federal Court
  • Reapplication with strengthened case
  • Addressing inadmissibility concerns and reapplying

Total Timeline Examples:

Spousal Sponsorship (Inland): 20-24 months start to finish

Spousal Sponsorship (Outland): 15-18 months (varies by country)

Parent/Grandparent Sponsorship: 30-34+ months

Dependent Children: 15-18 months

The process can feel long and uncertain. We’re here to guide you every step of the way.

[Take Our Free Eligibility Assessment]


IRCC processing times are estimates and may change at any time. While we carefully prepare each application, final processing timelines are determined solely by IRCC.

COMMON REFUSAL REASONS & HOW TO AVOID THEM

A Mississauga permanent resident sponsoring his spouse from India submitted an application that included a marriage certificate, three photographs, and a brief personal statement. No communication records. No witness letters. No financial evidence. No relationship timeline. The marriage was completely genuine. The IRCC officer refused the application on the grounds of insufficient evidence of a genuine relationship. A professional review of the evidence package before submission would have identified the gaps and resolved them.

Understanding common refusal reasons helps you avoid them. Here are the most frequent issues we see:

For Spousal/Partner Sponsorships:

Relationship Not Genuine: The most common refusal reason. IRCC doubts the relationship is real based on insufficient evidence, inconsistencies, or red flags.

How to avoid: Provide comprehensive relationship evidence, document your relationship timeline thoroughly, include varied types of evidence (financial, social, communication).

Marriage of Convenience: IRCC believes the relationship was entered into primarily for immigration purposes, not a genuine commitment.

How to avoid: Demonstrate a history of the relationship before marriage, show ongoing commitment, provide evidence of shared life and future plans.

Insufficient Evidence: Not enough documentation to prove the relationship or relationship milestones.

How to avoid: Submit a thorough evidence package with multiple types of documentation spanning your relationship.

Misrepresentation: Providing false information or concealing important facts (previous marriages, criminal records, etc.).

How to avoid: Full disclosure of all relevant information, even if potentially negative. It’s always better to address concerns proactively.

Inadmissibility: Sponsored person has a criminal record, medical condition, or other inadmissibility issue.

How to avoid: Disclose and address admissibility concerns early. Criminal rehabilitation or medical inadmissibility solutions may be available.

Sponsor Ineligibility: Sponsor doesn’t meet requirements (receiving social assistance, defaulted on previous sponsorship, five-year bar, etc.).

How to avoid: Carefully review sponsor eligibility before applying. Resolve outstanding debts or wait until eligible.

A Mississauga resident sponsoring her spouse submitted a marriage certificate obtained from a local registry office in Jamaica. IRCC requires authentication from Jamaica's Registrar General's Department. The locally obtained copy was not accepted. The application was delayed five months while the correctly authenticated document was sourced. A document review at the start of the process would have caught this immediately.

A family in Streetsville was preparing a Parent and Grandparent sponsorship application. Their combined income just reached the Minimum Necessary Income threshold - but one tax year reflected reduced income during a parental leave period. Under IRCC's calculation method, that lower year was counted in full. The application did not proceed. Identifying the income documentation strategy at the planning stage, rather than after the intake window had closed, would have changed the outcome.

Insufficient Income: Sponsor doesn’t meet LICO + 30% requirement for all three consecutive years.

How to avoid: Carefully calculate income requirements. Include all eligible income sources. Consider a co-signer if needed.

Incomplete Financial Documentation: Missing tax returns, NOAs, or employment letters.

How to avoid: Submit complete three years of financial documentation with all required supporting documents.

Relationship Not Proven: Insufficient proof of parent-child or grandparent-grandchild relationship.

How to avoid: Provide birth certificates, family documentation, photos, and other evidence establishing the relationship.

Incomplete Application: Missing forms, signatures, documents, or required fees.

How to avoid: Use detailed checklists, review application multiple times before submission, ensure all forms are the current versions.

Medical Inadmissibility: Sponsored person’s medical condition creates excessive demand on Canadian healthcare or social services.

How to avoid: Complete medical examination carefully. Seek advice if any medical concerns exist.

How We Help You Avoid Refusals:

Our thorough review process catches issues before they become problems. We’ve seen hundreds of applications and know exactly what IRCC looks for. We help you present the strongest possible case with comprehensive evidence, properly completed forms, and strategic responses to any concerns.

HOW WE HELP - YOUR TWO SERVICE OPTIONS

Family sponsorship applications need careful forms, strong evidence, and clear legal strategy. Our Mississauga family sponsorship lawyer can guide or fully represent your case.

 

Family sponsorship applications require careful attention to detail, thorough documentation, and strategic presentation of your case – and those requirements look different depending on which community you are part of, which country your documents come from, and what scrutiny factors your file involves. We offer two service levels to match your needs.

Option 1: Guided Application Review

You prepare your application with our expert guidance and review.

Perfect for sponsors who want to handle their own family sponsorship application but need professional legal oversight to reduce mistakes, missing documents, and avoidable delays.

  • You’re comfortable gathering documents and completing forms
  • You want expert review to catch mistakes before submission
  • You want to ensure your evidence package is strong
  • You’re looking for cost-effective professional guidance

Comprehensive Eligibility Assessment - We review both sponsor and sponsored person’s eligibility and identify any potential issues early.

Detailed Document Checklist - Customized checklist for your specific sponsorship category and situation.

Evidence Gathering Guidance - Strategic advice on what relationship evidence to include (for spousal applications) and how to organize it effectively.

Form Completion Templates - Guidance on how to complete all required forms accurately.

Full Legal Audit - Once you’ve prepared your complete application, we conduct a thorough review and provide detailed feedback and corrections.

Final Verification - Final review before you submit to ensure everything is complete and accurate.

Option 2: Full Care Representation

We handle everything for you from start to finish.

Perfect for sponsors who want peace of mind, have a complex situation, or prefer a family sponsorship lawyer in Mississauga to manage the full application process.

  • You want a stress-free, fully managed application process
  • You have a complex case (previous refusal, inadmissibility concerns, weak relationship documentation)
  • You prefer a legal team to handle everything
  • You value ongoing communication and professional representation

Complete Application Preparation - We prepare all forms, organize all documents, and compile your complete application package.

Strategic Evidence Package Development - We help you identify, gather, and organize the strongest possible relationship evidence (for spousal applications).

IRCC Communication - We act as your authorized representative and handle all correspondence with IRCC on your behalf.

Additional Document Requests - We manage any requests from IRCC for additional information or documentation.

Interview Preparation - If IRCC requests an interview, we prepare you thoroughly and can represent you at the interview.

Ongoing Support & Updates - Regular communication throughout the process from application to approval.

Still Not Sure Which Option Fits?

Book a free 15-minute discovery call. We’ll discuss your situation and help you choose the service level that matches your needs, timeline, and comfort level.

How We Charge: Clear, Fair, and Transparent

We believe you should know exactly what to expect. Our fees are straightforward, with no hidden costs or surprises.

WHY CHOOSE IPJ IMMIGRATION FOR FAMILY SPONSORSHIP

Two Decades of Ontario Experience

Family sponsorship files need more than basic form filling. They require strong documentation, careful review, and a clear understanding of IRCC expectations. With years of Ontario-based immigration experience, IPJ Immigration helps sponsors prepare complete, organized, and well-supported applications for spouses, partners, parents, children, and other eligible family members.

We Have Been Where You Are

Sponsoring a loved one can feel stressful, emotional, and confusing. You may worry about missing documents, long processing times, or whether your relationship evidence is strong enough. Our team understands these concerns and guides Mississauga families with clear advice, practical steps, and careful support throughout the sponsorship process.

RCIC and Lawyer Combination

IPJ Immigration brings together immigration consulting knowledge and legal insight to support your family sponsorship file. This combination helps us review your application from multiple angles, identify possible risks, and prepare your case with the attention it deserves. If your file has complications, previous refusals, or eligibility concerns, this added support can be especially valuable.

Meticulous Attention to Detail

Small mistakes can create big problems in a family sponsorship application. Missing signatures, weak evidence, unclear forms, or inconsistent information may delay your case or raise concerns. Our team carefully reviews every section of your file to help ensure your application is accurate, complete, and supported by the right documents.

You Are Not Just a File Number

Every family sponsorship case has a personal story behind it. We take time to understand your relationship, family situation, immigration history, and concerns before preparing your application strategy. Instead of using a one-size-fits-all approach, we give your file the personal attention it needs from start to finish.

Success With Difficult Cases

Some sponsorship files need extra care, especially when there has been a previous refusal, separation, missing documents, status issues, or questions about relationship genuineness. As a family sponsorship lawyer in Mississauga, IPJ Immigration can help present difficult facts clearly and prepare stronger supporting evidence for complex sponsorship situations.

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Frequently Asked Questions

You can sponsor your spouse, common-law partner, conjugal partner, dependent children, parents, grandparents, and, in limited circumstances, other relatives like orphaned siblings or nieces/nephews.

Processing times vary by category: Spousal/partner sponsorships take approximately 15-21 months, dependent children take 15-18 months, and parent/grandparent sponsorships take 24+ months.

No, there’s no minimum income requirement for spousal or dependent children sponsorships. However, you cannot be receiving social assistance (except disability) and must be able to meet basic needs.

You must meet or exceed Low Income Cut-Off (LICO) + 30% for your household size for three consecutive years. The required amount increases based on family size and includes the family members you’re sponsoring.

Inland requires both partners to live together in Canada, offers an open work permit possibility, but has no appeal rights. Outland allows travel, has appeal rights if refused, and can be used even if your partner is in Canada.

Yes, if you apply Outland. Your spouse can visit if they qualify for visitor status. However, for Inland applications, your spouse cannot travel outside Canada during processing without risking abandonment of the application.

Yes, if you’ve lived together in a conjugal relationship for at least 12 continuous months. You’ll need proof of cohabitation for the full 12 months.

No, Canada doesn’t recognize polygamous marriages. You can only sponsor one spouse or partner.

Only if you applied Outland. Inland applications cannot be appealed to the Immigration Appeal Division, but you can seek judicial review in Federal Court.

You must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident to sponsor parents/grandparents, AND you must meet the income requirements for three consecutive years. Recent permanent residents often need to wait until they have sufficient income history.

No, receiving social assistance (other than for disability) makes you ineligible to sponsor.

Yes, open work permits allow work for any employer, including a business owned by the sponsor.

Yes - if you are a Canadian citizen or permanent resident living in Canada and you meet the financial and eligibility requirements. You can choose inland processing if your spouse is already in Canada with valid status. Inland processing allows your spouse to apply for a spousal open work permit at the same time, meaning they can work legally in Mississauga while waiting for a decision. Outland processing is the option when your spouse is still abroad - or even if they are visiting Canada - and it typically results in faster overall processing and preserves your right to appeal if the application is refused. We assess which approach is strategically stronger for your specific situation before any forms are filed.

Inland means your spouse applies from within Canada. They may qualify for a spousal open work permit, allowing them to work anywhere in the city - including with local employers - while waiting. Outland means your spouse applies from their home country or as a visitor in Canada. Overall processing is often faster outland, and you retain appeal rights if refused. The right choice depends on your spouse's current status in Canada and whether work authorization during the wait is a priority.

Yes. The Super Visa is a practical option for Mississauga families who want parents present for extended periods - for up to five years at a time. It requires private Canadian health insurance from a Canadian provider with minimum $100,000 coverage, a medical examination, and financial documentation from you as the Canadian sponsor. We prepare the full Super Visa application package. If your longer-term goal is permanent residence for your parents through the Parent and Grandparent Program, we can help you understand how the two programs work together.

Yes. We review the specific refusal reason 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. Outland spousal refusals can also be appealed to the Immigration Appeal Division - we assess whether an appeal or a reapplication is the stronger path.

Yes. These are among the most common countries of origin in Mississauga sponsorship files, and each has specific authentication requirements that differ from Canadian document standards. India requires MEA apostille authentication. Pakistan requires Nadra verification. Philippines documents must come from the Philippine Statistics Authority - local civil registry copies are not accepted. Jamaican vital records must be authenticated by the Registrar General's Department. We identify the exact document requirements for your country of origin at the start of the process, before you request any documents.

Your Next Step Starts Here

Canada’s family sponsorship process can feel confusing, especially when forms, eligibility rules, and supporting documents must be prepared correctly. A family sponsorship lawyer in Mississauga can help you understand your Permanent Residency Canada options, review your situation, and take the next step with confidence.

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Free 15-Minute Discovery Call

Not sure where to start with your family sponsorship application? In this short call, we will listen to your situation, understand who you want to sponsor, and explain whether our legal team may be able to help.

This call is ideal if you need quick direction before booking a full consultation.

Paid 45-Minute Consultation

Already planning to sponsor your spouse, partner, parent, child, or another eligible family member, but unsure about the process? In this focused consultation, we review your situation in more detail, discuss eligibility, identify possible concerns, and explain the next steps for your family sponsorship application.

This option is best if you want clear legal guidance before starting or submitting your file.

READY TO START?

Answer a few quick questions about your relationship, immigration status, family member, and sponsorship goals. Our team will review your information and guide you on the best next step for your family sponsorship case in Mississauga.

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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.