Canada offers sponsorship programs for Canadian permanent residents or citizens who want to bring a loved one to Canada. These programs allow certain families to become permanent residents of Canada. One of the most popular streams of Canadian immigration.
Family sponsorship programs allows citizens and permanent residents to easily bring their spouses, children, and other immediate family members as follows to canada.
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You may be eligible to sponsor your spouse, common-law, or conjugal partner for Canadian permanent residence, whether they are residing in Canada with a valid temporary resident visa or living abroad. Applicants who are living inside Canada may also qualify for an open work permit
Canada’s commitment to family reunification extends to grandparents and parents of Canadian citizens and permanent residents through the PGP program. To sponsor a parent or grandparent, permanent residents and Canadian citizens will be required to show that they can financially support their family by meeting the Minimum Necessary Income (MNI) for the size of their family unit.
Include children as accompanying dependents on sponsorship application for permanent residence. Canada’s child sponsorship program allows permanent residents and Canadian citizens to sponsor their children (biological or adopted)
Permanent residents and Canadian citizens may be eligible to sponsor their orphaned brother, sister, niece, nephew, or grandchild to come to Canada. To sponsor your orphaned relatives, they must be under 18 years old, unmarried, and related to you by blood or adoption.
Permanent residents and Canadian citizens may be eligible to sponsor one extended relative to come to Canada. Sponsoring a relative that falls outside of Canada’s current Family Class definition, sponsors must be defined as a “Lonely Canadian”. It means the sponsor has no child, spouse, common-law partner, parent, or grandparent.
If you are a permanent resident or Canadian citizen of Canada, you may sponsor:
There are 2 types of spousal or common-law sponsorship applications:
Inland: The application can be made from within Canada because the person you wish to sponsor is currently in Canada. Inland sponsorship allows applicants to continue to live in Canada while their application for permanent residence is in process.
If the application is made from within Canada, the person you are sponsoring may apply for an open work permit that would allow them to work for any employer in Canada while the sponsorship application is being processed.
Outland: In this case, the person you are sponsoring and who resides abroad will normally wait for permanent residence outside of the country but may visit you in Canada on a temporary resident visa.
Children must meet the following definition of a dependent child to be eligible for sponsorship:
To be eligible under the Parents and Grandparents Program, you must:
Your spouse or common-law partner can help you meet the income requirement by co-signing the undertaking.
If a co-signer is helping you meet the MNI requirements, the co-signer must meet the similar eligibility criteria as sponsor. In addition, a co-signer must:
Sponsor will be required to sign an “undertaking” making sponsor legally responsible for the family member being sponsored. The length of the undertaking to sign will depend on the family member being sponsored and, in the case of children, their age:
Sponsored Person | Length of Undertaking (excluding Quebec) |
Spouse, common-law partner or conjugal partner | 3 years |
Dependent child | 10 years, or until age 25, whichever comes first |
Dependent child 22 years of age or older | 3 years |
Parent or grandparent | 20 years |
Other relative | 10 years |
For Quebec residents, the length of undertaking also depends on the family member you are sponsoring and, in the case of children, their age:
Sponsored Person | Length of Undertaking |
Spouse, common-law partner or conjugal partner | 3 years |
Dependent child under 16 years of age | Minimum 10 years (or until age 18), whichever is longer |
Dependent child 16 years of age and older | Minimum 3 years (or until age 25), whichever is longer |
Other relatives | 10 years |
Family Members | MNI 2021 | MNI 2020 | MNI 2019 |
2 persons | $32,898 | $32,270 | $41,007 |
3 persons | $40,444 | $39,672 | $50,414 |
4 persons | $49,106 | $48,167 | $61,209 |
5 persons | $55,694 | $54,630 | $69,423 |
6 persons | $62,814 | $61,613 | $78,296 |
7 persons | $69,934 | $68,598 | $87,172 |
Each additional person | $7,120 | $6,985 | $8,876 |