Its very common for temporary resident visa applications to get declined. It’s the applicant’s responsibility to convince the immigration officer that they intend to leave Canada at the end of their temporary visit pursuant to section IRPR 179(b).
Immigration officers can use multiple reasons to refuse such temporary Resident Visas, for example:
I am not satisfied that you will leave Canada at the end of your stay as stipulated in paragraph 179(b) of IRPR based on
- your Travel History
- family ties in Canada and country of residence
- immigration status in your country of residence
- personal assets and financial status
- current employment situation
- length of proposed stay in Canada
- employment prospects in country of residence
- I am not satisfied that you have sufficient funds, including income or assets, to carry out your stated purpose in going to Canada or to maintain yourself while in Canada and to affect your departure.
- You have not provided sufficient documentation to support your / your host’s income and assets.
- You have submitted documentation which lacks authenticity as part of your application. This has diminished the overall credibility of your submission
There are multiple reasons that cause refusal with above reasons, they could be:
- There are deficiencies in your application
- Your application is processed by artificial intelligence and is marked incorrectly for refusal
- Immigration officer made a mistake in assessing your case from the information and evidence in application, applying the immigration laws or processed application under incorrect act or regulation.
- Immigration officers / software made a mistake in your refusal letter and breached the requirements of procedural fairness.
You can watch our video about this program here:
In many cases, an experienced immigration consultant can identify these errors and mistakes and can help turn your refusal to an approval with a properly made application. Our team has done it multiple times for our clients.