How spousal sponsorship works
Spousal sponsorship allows eligible Canadian citizens and permanent residents to sponsor their spouse, common-law partner, conjugal partner, or dependent child for permanent residence. For spouses and common-law partners, applicants may need to choose between an outside Canada family class application and an in-Canada spouse or common-law partner class application, depending on the situation.
IRCC explains that the process includes two applications: a sponsorship application, where the sponsor applies to become a sponsor, and a permanent residence application, where the person being sponsored applies for PR. These applications are generally submitted together online through the Permanent Residence Portal.
Why relationship evidence is important
One of the most important parts of a spousal sponsorship application is proving that the relationship is genuine and not entered into mainly for immigration purposes. Evidence may include marriage documents, proof of living together, communication records, photos, travel records, joint finances, family support letters, children’s documents, or other proof depending on the couple’s history.
The documents should be clear and organized. A large pile of random screenshots is not always helpful. A stronger application usually explains the relationship timeline and connects the evidence to important dates, such as when the couple met, when the relationship became serious, when they married or began living together, and how they support each other.
Common mistakes to avoid
Common mistakes include missing signatures, outdated forms, unclear scans, incomplete relationship timelines, inconsistent addresses, and weak proof of cohabitation for common-law cases. Applicants should also be careful with translations and police certificates where required.
Family sponsorship is emotional and important. A complete application can reduce stress and help avoid unnecessary delays for couples trying to build their future together in Canada.

