+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445

Rccla

Newbie
Feb 14, 2019
1
0
Hello all. My fiancee and I have been together for four years and want to now live together in Canada. My main question is what do I tell the border officer upon entry to have the highest chance of eventually getting PR. We have travelled to each other’s countries a few times and we no longer can tolerate being apart.

She is a Canadian citizen, and is First Nations. I am a U.S. citizen. As stated we have been dating for four years, since 12/17/2014 and got engaged on 1/22/2019. My plan right now is to enter Canada through an airport and arrive in Manitoba, and when questioned by border officers claim the same as before, saying i will only be there temporarily to visit my fiance. We want to get married, have a small ceremony (the “real” one will take place in Mexico in a year), and apply for spousal sponsorship and a work permit at the same time. I have a job offer from a construction company that takes contracts from the city of Winnipeg, and she currently makes 46k a year at a job she recently started 1 month ago (they confirmed they will be keeping her permanently).

When i enter and my passport is not stamped, am I in possession of a 6 month temporary resident visa, or do i have to ask for one and have one officially besides the stamp. And if so, would that suffice to apply for spousal sponsorship inland, as well as the work permit? I will have the FBI background check needed and my birth certificate mailed to me to not raise suspicions carrying it across the border. Or would i be better off claiming “immigration” as my reason for visiting and letting the officer know i plan on getting married and working as well as letting him know of the job offer. I would assume i need proof of my fiancee’s income, and other such things if i were to let them know.
And is there any big benefit to doing so such as when applying for the temporary visa and work permit upon entry i could receive even the work permit immediately? From what I’ve read i need an lmia exemption code to apply at the border for the work permit or, an approval; a code that i could use would be A70 which seems to be for spouse or common law partner under canada class, yet in that case i would have to already have applied for spousal sponsorship for which we would have to get married for wouldnt i?

Sorry for any confusion and I appreciate any and all help and clarification. Thank you to all. Please ask any questions necessary.
 
Last edited:
Hello all. My fiancee and I have been together for four years and want to now live together in Canada. My main question is what do I tell the border officer upon entry to have the highest chance of eventually getting PR. We have travelled to each other’s countries a few times and we no longer can tolerate being apart.

She is a Canadian citizen, and is First Nations. I am a U.S. citizen. As stated we have been dating for four years, since 12/17/2014 and got engaged on 1/22/2019. My plan right now is to enter Canada through an airport and arrive in Manitoba, and when questioned by border officers claim the same as before, saying i will only be there temporarily to visit my fiance. We want to get married, have a small ceremony (the “real” one will take place in Mexico in a year), and apply for spousal sponsorship and a work permit at the same time. I have a job offer from a construction company that takes contracts from the city of Winnipeg, and she currently makes 46k a year at a job she recently started 1 month ago (they confirmed they will be keeping her permanently).

When i enter and my passport is not stamped, am I in possession of a 6 month temporary resident visa, or do i have to ask for one and have one officially besides the stamp. And if so, would that suffice to apply for spousal sponsorship inland, as well as the work permit? I will have the FBI background check needed and my birth certificate mailed to me to not raise suspicions carrying it across the border. Or would i be better off claiming “immigration” as my reason for visiting and letting the officer know i plan on getting married and working as well as letting him know of the job offer. I would assume i need proof of my fiancee’s income, and other such things if i were to let them know.
And is there any big benefit to doing so such as when applying for the temporary visa and work permit upon entry i could receive even the work permit immediately? From what I’ve read i need an lmia exemption code to apply at the border for the work permit or, an approval; a code that i could use would be A70 which seems to be for spouse or common law partner under canada class, yet in that case i would have to already have applied for spousal sponsorship for which we would have to get married for wouldnt i?

Sorry for any confusion and I appreciate any and all help and clarification. Thank you to all. Please ask any questions necessary.

You don't need a passport stamp to get married in Canada or apply for PR. Just enter Canada like you have on your other visits. I wouldn't mention anything about getting married unless specifically asked.

You don't qualify for a work permit at this time and can't apply at the border. Once you are married, you would need to submit an inland sponsorship application (which would require you to remain in Canada) and then include an open work permit with that application (all of this has to be done by mail). The work permit will be approved around four months after the complete application package is received.