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

CitizenSoon

Hero Member
Sep 19, 2018
206
35
My friend, a Canadian citizen living in Montreal, travelled to back home and got married. He submitted a sponsorship application 18 months ago. He is now considering moving to another province because the processing times outside of Quebec are much less.

His inquiries:
1- After how many months can he expect the application to be finalized?

2- What steps does he need to take to move his file from Quebec to another province?

3- Are there any specific risks or concerns he should keep in mind during this process?

4- Does the 18-month period he has already waited count toward the total processing time?
 
My friend, a Canadian citizen living in Montreal, travelled to back home and got married. He submitted a sponsorship application 18 months ago. He is now considering moving to another province because the processing times outside of Quebec are much less.

His inquiries:
1- After how many months can he expect the application to be finalized?

2- What steps does he need to take to move his file from Quebec to another province?

3- Are there any specific risks or concerns he should keep in mind during this process?

4- Does the 18-month period he has already waited count toward the total processing time?

1. Dependent on many things but on average processing times should be less than in Quebec.

2. He should move to another province and establish a life there like find a job outside Quebec and leave his Quebec job. Secure housing and live in that housing outside of Quebec. If he owns a home for example in Quebec that would make things more complicated. He should then secure things like a health card, driver’s license or other form of documentation, register and insure a car if he owns one outside in the new province, etc. He would then inform IRCC of his change of address and include proof that he has left his life in Quebec and established a permanent life outside Quebec.

3. Not if he has truly left Quebec and has no immediate plans of returning. Of course there are risks associated with uprooting your life and starting a life in another location. The cost of living can be much higher in some locations and leaving a job these days without securing another one is very risky. You would also be losing any form of seniority if you changed jobs which would be taking a risk these days given all the layoffs happening and the tough job market.

4. Yes and no. You wouldn’t have to start processing from scratch but you wouldn’t be given credit for the full 18 months of processing that had already happened. It’s unclear how much processing time you get credit for but spousal sponsorship for most outside Quebec doesn’t take years.