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And I applied the second time and it got rejected again.

I’m trying to understand my mother’s second Canada visitor visa refusal and would appreciate any thoughts.

For the first application, the proposed visit was from Aug 1 to Oct 31, 2026. The purpose was to support my wife and me after the birth of our child, including emotional support, household tasks, and newborn care.

After the refusal, we made the second application much shorter and more temporary. We changed the visit to June 29 to July 10, 2026, only about 11 days, and changed the purpose to meeting her first grandchild and spending time with family. We removed the newborn care/household support wording. We also clearly stated that she would return to India to resume her government job and attend to her family/property responsibilities, including her aging father, whose care would be handled by her husband and caregiver during her short absence.

For finances, she is self-funding the trip. She submitted proof of funds, salary slips, tax returns, property documents, and government employment/NOC documents. My role as the inviter was only to provide accommodation.

Despite these changes, the second refusal still gave similar reasons: purpose of visit not consistent with temporary stay, insufficient financial/assets situation, and not satisfied she would leave Canada.

Does anyone see what could still be causing the concern, especially given the second application was much shorter and more clearly temporary?
 
And I applied the second time and it got rejected again.

I’m trying to understand my mother’s second Canada visitor visa refusal and would appreciate any thoughts.

For the first application, the proposed visit was from Aug 1 to Oct 31, 2026. The purpose was to support my wife and me after the birth of our child, including emotional support, household tasks, and newborn care.

After the refusal, we made the second application much shorter and more temporary. We changed the visit to June 29 to July 10, 2026, only about 11 days, and changed the purpose to meeting her first grandchild and spending time with family. We removed the newborn care/household support wording. We also clearly stated that she would return to India to resume her government job and attend to her family/property responsibilities, including her aging father, whose care would be handled by her husband and caregiver during her short absence.

For finances, she is self-funding the trip. She submitted proof of funds, salary slips, tax returns, property documents, and government employment/NOC documents. My role as the inviter was only to provide accommodation.

Despite these changes, the second refusal still gave similar reasons: purpose of visit not consistent with temporary stay, insufficient financial/assets situation, and not satisfied she would leave Canada.

Does anyone see what could still be causing the concern, especially given the second application was much shorter and more clearly temporary?
Funds: How much cash did she show in personal accounts. That is all that counts.

Temporary stay: Timelines don't make sense but assuming you gave birth earlier than planned fi coming in June-July to meet grandchild vs coming August 1 for the birth and helping. IRCC knows your wife was pregnant and intended her to come and help. So she showed job letter with approved leave as she has no relevant family responsibilities. Aging father is not relevant nor tie to return. He has a caregiver. As for property she shows the title in her name with tenant leases etc. Not sure what property responsibilities are.

Seems like she filed her second application right after first refusal. She shouldn't apply again for at least 6 months.
 
@Naturgrl thanks, this is helpful!

On funds: she showed approximately CAD 250,000 in total liquid funds in the proof-of-funds package. The CAD 15,000 amount in the application was not her total available cash/net worth — it was the amount she was allocating specifically for this short trip. She also included salary slips and income tax returns to show stable ongoing income. So I’m a bit confused by the “insufficient funds” concern, unless the officer discounted some assets or felt the package was not clearly summarized.

On the timeline: yes, the baby was born earlier than expected. The first application was for a longer visit and the wording may have sounded like she was coming to help with newborn care. In the second application, we shortened the trip to around 11 days and changed the purpose to meeting her first grandchild and spending time with family, not providing childcare or household help.

On ties: agreed that “aging father” may not be the strongest tie if a caregiver is already arranged. The stronger ties are her long-term government job, approved leave/return-to-work obligation, spouse remaining in India, ongoing employment income, and property/financial assets in India.

On reapplying: do you know if there is an official basis for waiting 6 months? My understanding is that IRCC allows reapplication at any time unless the refusal letter says otherwise, but the new application should address the refusal reasons with new or clearer information. In our case, the second application was changed significantly by shortening the visit and changing the purpose, but maybe the explanation wasn’t strong enough.
 
@Naturgrl thanks, this is helpful!

On funds: she showed approximately CAD 250,000 in total liquid funds in the proof-of-funds package. The CAD 15,000 amount in the application was not her total available cash/net worth — it was the amount she was allocating specifically for this short trip. She also included salary slips and income tax returns to show stable ongoing income. So I’m a bit confused by the “insufficient funds” concern, unless the officer discounted some assets or felt the package was not clearly summarized.

On the timeline: yes, the baby was born earlier than expected. The first application was for a longer visit and the wording may have sounded like she was coming to help with newborn care. In the second application, we shortened the trip to around 11 days and changed the purpose to meeting her first grandchild and spending time with family, not providing childcare or household help.

On ties: agreed that “aging father” may not be the strongest tie if a caregiver is already arranged. The stronger ties are her long-term government job, approved leave/return-to-work obligation, spouse remaining in India, ongoing employment income, and property/financial assets in India.

On reapplying: do you know if there is an official basis for waiting 6 months? My understanding is that IRCC allows reapplication at any time unless the refusal letter says otherwise, but the new application should address the refusal reasons with new or clearer information. In our case, the second application was changed significantly by shortening the visit and changing the purpose, but maybe the explanation wasn’t strong enough.
1. Funds: If she has $250k CDN in cash in personal bank accounts then she shows that. Salary slips and income tax returns are not proof of funds. Assets are not proof of funds. It is cash in the bank that counts. So how much did she show in her personal bank accounts.

2. Her ties are job and spouse but the issue is that Canada has cracked down on approving TRV especially to those from India. Too many parents have come over, not left, filed for H&C etc. So a job and spouse isn't enough to IRCC.

She has two refusals in a short period of time. Another one shows desperation to come to Canada to IRCC as they believe she will overstay with a child and now grandchild in Canada.
 
1. Funds: If she has $250k CDN in cash in personal bank accounts then she shows that. Salary slips and income tax returns are not proof of funds. Assets are not proof of funds. It is cash in the bank that counts. So how much did she show in her personal bank accounts.

2. Her ties are job and spouse but the issue is that Canada has cracked down on approving TRV especially to those from India. Too many parents have come over, not left, filed for H&C etc. So a job and spouse isn't enough to IRCC.

She has two refusals in a short period of time. Another one shows desperation to come to Canada to IRCC as they believe she will overstay with a child and now grandchild in Canada.
1. Funds: She showed exactly that with a CFA that attested it
2. Ties: Interesting! I thought a government job alone is a strong enough tie. What else can she add to build a stronger case?
3. Reapplication: Well there is desperation since she does want to meet her first ever grandchild. How long would you recommend her to wait before reapplying?
 
Regarding the duration, a two-month stay is entirely standard for international visitors, especially for grandparents traveling across the world to support their family after a birth. It is a reasonable timeframe that allows for bonding without exceeding the typical 6-month stay granted to most tourists.

I understand the concept of home ties, but many families successfully travel together. In our case, my mother has significant obligations, including reporting back to her government position and managing our properties, both of which serve as strong incentives to return.

Regarding 'unauthorized work,' IRCC distinguishes between professional labor and familial support. Assisting a son and daughter-in-law with a newborn is a standard familial activity, not labor market displacement. The goal is simply for both grandparents to meet their grandchild, which is a common and valid reason for a visitor visa.

Would be great if you could answer 4 and 5.
And you’re wrong on the working part . I worked for the Government for nine years . It’s considered employment by the Federal Government on what she was going to do . People get paid for that . But you sound like you know far better , and have things totally under control with two refusals
And it’s the CRA that distinguishes between labour bud , not the IRCC
 
1. Funds: She showed exactly that with a CFA that attested it
2. Ties: Interesting! I thought a government job alone is a strong enough tie. What else can she add to build a stronger case?
3. Reapplication: Well there is desperation since she does want to meet her first ever grandchild. How long would you recommend her to wait before reapplying?
She has two refusals in quick succession. She shouldn't be applying for at least 6 months because there is nothing she can change in her application. A job is not enough. You say she has property responsibilities so show if there is a family business, tenancy agreements etc.

Not sure on funds issue since she has $250k in cash in her personal bank account not in a joint account, and these are not assets, stocks etc.

Your invitation letters have not helped her case. First she was coming to "help" you with caring for your child and now she is visiting to meet her grandchild. Also first she was coming for 2 months and then changed to less than two weeks. To IRCC with the two refusals, IRCC believes she is coming to help you care for her child and will not leave. She could come and stay 6 months and then ask for extension.