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Rachel Huang

Full Member
May 12, 2016
26
0
Hi, guys

I am PR, and meet all requirements to be a sponsor. I have a boyfriend living outside Canada. We have been in common-law relationship for more than 1 year when we are outside Canada. We are not together now, can I sponsor him?

Or we have to be together in Canada, then I can sponsor him?


Thanks. :)
 
Hi Rachel, when you say you are not together - do you mean not a couple?
 
If you have been in a common law relationship for greater than 1 year and have the documents to prove it (shared lease agreement, shared bills) you may sponsor him. However, if you have only been dating for 1 year but do not have any of the required documents then you will be ineligible to sponsor under common law. My wife and I were looking at common law sponsorship before and proving co-habitation is key. Hope this helps!
 
RapsFan905 said:
If you have been in a common law relationship for greater than 1 year and have the documents to prove it (shared lease agreement, shared bills) you may sponsor him. However, if you have only been dating for 1 year but do not have any of the required documents then you will be ineligible to sponsor under common law. My wife and I were looking at common law sponsorship before and proving co-habitation is key. Hope this helps!

Thanks. That really helps.
 
Rachel Huang said:
Hi, guys

I am PR, and meet all requirements to be a sponsor. I have a boyfriend living outside Canada. We have been in common-law relationship for more than 1 year when we are outside Canada. We are not together now, can I sponsor him?

Or we have to be together in Canada, then I can sponsor him?


Thanks. :)

How come in all your previous posts your story is completely different changing from being a PR, not being a PR, having a wife, etc? Are you asking on behalf of others??

To answer this question, if you've previously cohabited for 12 continuous months anywhere in the world, and have the documents to prove it, then you would be common-law and could sponsor your common-law partner. You can live apart after the 12 months qualifying time, however the longer the time you no longer live with your partner the more difficult it will be to prove the common-law relationship still exists.
 
Rob_TO said:
How come in all your previous posts your story is completely different changing from being a PR, not being a PR, having a wife, etc? Are you asking on behalf of others??

To answer this question, if you've previously cohabited for 12 continuous months anywhere in the world, and have the documents to prove it, then you would be common-law and could sponsor your common-law partner. You can live apart after the 12 months qualifying time, however the longer the time you no longer live with your partner the more difficult it will be to prove the common-law relationship still exists.


First, Thank you for your answer.
I am working as an immigration case worker, and starts taking immigration consultant program as well. This forum is a very good way to ask some questions, because there are a lot of experienced people, like you, are willing to answer the questions. Sometimes, when I read CIC website or books, and I am not really sure about some points, I will post questions here to looking for other people's opinion.
 
Rachel Huang said:
I am PR, and meet all requirements to be a sponsor. I have a boyfriend living outside Canada. We have been in common-law relationship for more than 1 year when we are outside Canada. We are not together now, can I sponsor him?

Or we have to be together in Canada, then I can sponsor him?

Depends. Had the couple already been living together for at least a year when the one person became a PR?
 
canuck_in_uk said:
Depends. Had the couple already been living together for at least a year when the one person became a PR?

Ooooh...good question! ;)
 
Rachel Huang said:
First, Thank you for your answer.
I am working as an immigration case worker, and starts taking immigration consultant program as well. This forum is a very good way to ask some questions, because there are a lot of experienced people, like you, are willing to answer the questions. Sometimes, when I read CIC website or books, and I am not really sure about some points, I will post questions here to looking for other people's opinion.

You should indicate in your posts you are asking on behalf of someone else, not pretending you are the person in question. Other posters routinely do a quick search of post history for some reference, and yours will confuse people.

As mentioned, you need to confirm exactly when your client became PR, and if at that time they were already common-law or not. And if so, if they declared their common-law partner in their own PR application.
 
Rob_TO said:
You should indicate in your posts you are asking on behalf of someone else, not pretending you are the person in question. Other posters routinely do a quick search of post history for some reference, and yours will confuse people.

As mentioned, you need to confirm exactly when your client became PR, and if at that time they were already common-law or not. And if so, if they declared their common-law partner in their own PR application.

Thanks. I will follow your suggestion.