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I am planning to apply under the Venture-Capital route (paid VC programme) and want real experiences please.

  1. Did anyone use AnyVisa (or another RCIC/lawyer) to transfer/pay the VC commitment, or do VCs deal directly with founders (no lawyer payment to VC)?
  2. Any successful PR cases recently from UAE — please share how you secured the Letter of Support (VC name and route: VC / angel / incubator).
  3. Also — from current threads/numbers (40k applicants quoted) does anyone know approximate splits: how many are VC-backed (paid/priority) vs angel vs incubator applications?

Thanks — appreciate any verified experiences or links to confirmed cases.
 
Hello everyone, SUV-members,
I am an Alumi member here, who applied PR under this stream from mid 2020 and got PR on early 2023, and have been granted citizenship recently. it can say, my family was settled down quite well in this new country after 3 years. Because of an injury, I was approved for 7days off from my company, so I have a chance to come back to this forum, which brings back to me all old-unforgetable-memories when I was at your situation. And now please accept me to share some of my thoughts from my POV.

First of all, I feel so sorry about the insane of processing timeline, 10+ years. From my perspective, it is another way of shutting down the program because no business is considered a start-up in the 10y term length; even 3y or 5y is also inappropriate. In short, within these very long years, if you do nothing for the startup (just wait for the PR granted then start), IRCC will refuse your application because of the stupid famous reason: "you have no serious intention, or are not dedicated to starting a startup in Canada". And what if you do? Well, 5y or 10y giving up your current career, current job for a vague start up, cost a lot of money, time, hope, and chances; in return for a right to stay and run business in a not-home country(!!!), is gonna make us look like a fool more than an entrepreneur.

Second, most of us here have thought that PR is the destination, but actually it is just the starting point for a journey full of difficulties and challenges in another country ahead. That challenge can come at an extremely high cost, that we couldnot pay for, or also the sweet rewards if we overcome. And there is a bitter truth that Canada is not a paradise for everyone. I have seen many suv families (most of them are wealthy families in their host country) came here and then left because they could not associate with the social here. It wasn't simply just leaving, they had previously suffered countless wounds and disappointments. Is this worth it?

From my sincerity, I am not saying that you should give up, but I want you to consider and prepare carefully for your situation. I know that each of us has good reasons why we decide to settle in another country, but please remember that Canada can solve your current problems, but at the same time it will also create new problems that you can never imagine. So please consider it. And finally I want to say all the hard work pays off. Stay strong everyone. Good luck.
I am planning to apply under the Venture-Capital route (paid VC programme) and want real experiences please.

Congratulations on getting your PR!
I’d really appreciate your sincere advice — did you apply through the VO Priority Stream and invest via the Venture Capital program? Also, did you work with a lawyer (like AnyVisa) to handle the payment to the VC, or did you pay the Venture Capital firm directly?
 
I am planning to apply under the Venture-Capital route (paid VC programme) and want real experiences please.

  1. Did anyone use AnyVisa (or another RCIC/lawyer) to transfer/pay the VC commitment, or do VCs deal directly with founders (no lawyer payment to VC)?
  2. Any successful PR cases recently from UAE — please share how you secured the Letter of Support (VC name and route: VC / angel / incubator).
  3. Also — from current threads/numbers (40k applicants quoted) does anyone know approximate splits: how many are VC-backed (paid/priority) vs angel vs incubator applications?

Thanks — appreciate any verified experiences or links to confirmed cases.
how much do they charge these days?
 
I am planning to apply under the Venture-Capital route (paid VC programme) and want real experiences please.

  1. Did anyone use AnyVisa (or another RCIC/lawyer) to transfer/pay the VC commitment, or do VCs deal directly with founders (no lawyer payment to VC)?
  2. Any successful PR cases recently from UAE — please share how you secured the Letter of Support (VC name and route: VC / angel / incubator).
  3. Also — from current threads/numbers (40k applicants quoted) does anyone know approximate splits: how many are VC-backed (paid/priority) vs angel vs incubator applications?

Thanks — appreciate any verified experiences or links to confirmed cases.

AnyVisa and Dr. Alex are considered legit and reliable. He’s a bit tough and strict in how he handles files, but that’s part of his style — and many people have worked with AnyVisa without issues up to now.

About recent PR approvals from UAE, I honestly haven’t seen many. This year in general has been very slow for PR decisions under the SUV program (not only for UAE). Only one group of applicants in the forums mentioned they received PR earlier this year, but nothing significant or consistent apart from that.

Regarding the portion of VC vs Angel vs Incubator cases in the backlog, no one has real numbers. But based on PRs issued before April 2024, we can roughly estimate:

  • VC: around 5%
  • Angel: around 25%
  • Incubators: around 70%
However, after April 2024, this likely shifted more toward VC and Angel, because they are treated as priority.
Not all incubators are non-priority, but only a few are considered priority, so overall VC and Angel share has increased, at the expense of most incubator cases.
 
I am planning to apply under the Venture-Capital route (paid VC programme) and want real experiences please.

  1. Did anyone use AnyVisa (or another RCIC/lawyer) to transfer/pay the VC commitment, or do VCs deal directly with founders (no lawyer payment to VC)?
  2. Any successful PR cases recently from UAE — please share how you secured the Letter of Support (VC name and route: VC / angel / incubator).
  3. Also — from current threads/numbers (40k applicants quoted) does anyone know approximate splits: how many are VC-backed (paid/priority) vs angel vs incubator applications?

Thanks — appreciate any verified experiences or links to confirmed cases.
don't apply now . wait for some time
 
Brothers and sisters, please share this message on X to make our collective voice visible.

We support the government’s efforts to ensure integrity, fairness, and security within the immigration system. Addressing fraud and misuse is both necessary and in the public interest. However, we respectfully emphasize that current processing backlogs are the result of administrative and operational delays, not applicant misconduct. Therefore, any legislative authority that allows cancellation or refusal on the basis of “public interest” should be clearly defined, limited, and transparent. Applicants who have complied in good faith with the established rules should not be disadvantaged due to systemic delays beyond their control. Clear criteria and safeguards will protect program credibility, uphold fairness, and maintain Canada’s reputation as a reliable and principled country.
Can you share the topic hashtags on X so everyone’s posts can help bring SUV topics to the trending list and get more attention?
 
Hi.. Any specific reasoning. Voice your idea...

The Start-Up Visa program is in uncertain phase. unmanageable backlogs (109.4 years of processing time) and there is Bill C-12 under discussion. Exactly what changes will come, or how they will be applied, is not really known yet.
 
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Brothers and sisters, please share this message on X to make our collective voice visible.

We support the government’s efforts to ensure integrity, fairness, and security within the immigration system. Addressing fraud and misuse is both necessary and in the public interest. However, we respectfully emphasize that current processing backlogs are the result of administrative and operational delays, not applicant misconduct. Therefore, any legislative authority that allows cancellation or refusal on the basis of “public interest” should be clearly defined, limited, and transparent. Applicants who have complied in good faith with the established rules should not be disadvantaged due to systemic delays beyond their control. Clear criteria and safeguards will protect program credibility, uphold fairness, and maintain Canada’s reputation as a reliable and principled country.
My lawyer told me he got some feedback from the incubator saying that IRCC is setting up a new review process. They might screen the current backlog in a different way, maybe stricter or more focused on contributing to Canada’s economy. I’m not sure how true it is, and it could just be something to comfort me. But even if it’s real, it likely means everything will be delayed another two to three years. I think with 40,000 SUV applicants, there could be around 8,000 startup projects. If each project creates 5 to 10 jobs within one or two years, that’s 40,000 to 80,000 new jobs. That’s enough to affect Canada’s unemployment numbers. We should speak up to make the government pay more serious attention to startup founders.
https://www.change.org/p/save-canad...-build-canada-s-future?source_location=search
 
Agree.. But Change.org petition is only a tool for public expression. It is generally not powerful enough. The petitions on Change.Org can bring visibility to the SUV applicants, potentially catching the attention of journalists, and in to some advocates with no legal weight.
 
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