For how many people?is $3000 enough to show to visa officer for tourist visa, this will be for 2 weeks.
Not usually.
Dont know when you planning this but currently minimum stay due to COVID for a visit is 15 days , 14 days of which would be in isolation. That assumes of course you are an immediate family member of a PR or citizen.1 person, what if change it to 1 week stay then? will it be enough to convince visa officer (in terms of budget).
No, because a roundtrip ticket to Canada, depending on the origin, can cost around $1500 on average. That means half of your savings went to airfare alone.
Dont know when you planning this but currently minimum stay due to COVID for a visit is 15 days , 14 days of which would be in isolation. That assumes of course you are an immediate family member of a PR or citizen.
Maybe best for now to apply when restrictions are lifted maybe later in year at rate things are goind with COVID
Very hard to comment without knowing your whole situation. Like whether you are visitinf family or is this tourism.
If your total savings are $3000, that’s hardly enough to cover airfare and accommodations for a week.
Hopefully those aren't your life savings?approx $1500 for flight ticket, ~$700 for hotel = $2200
$800 for food and transpo (public transpo?)
don't you think its enough?
Hopefully those aren't your life savings?
You're not going to get a TRV if you blow your life savings on a trip to Canada. In IRCC's eyes, that's a surefire avenue to illegal overstay and work in Canada.
If you're talking about the savings to show as your proof of finances, I personally recommend showing at least $10,000 in bank accounts.
Some people only declare their "budget" for the trip in this part but show the rest of their bank accounts amounting to over $10,000+.
A recommendation a few of us go by in this forum is to show *at least* $1000 per week of stay in Canada, plus the cost of roundtrip air fare. So for a 2-week trip, $4000 is a comfortable budget. It's not a hard rule, $1000/week is indeed very generous.