Spousal Sponsorship Lawyers in Toronto
Bring your spouse or partner to Canada as a permanent resident.
Our Toronto immigration lawyers handle spousal, common-law, and
conjugal partner sponsorship applications – from eligibility
assessment through to PR approval. We also assist with parent,
grandparent, and dependent child sponsorship.
- 27% of inland spousal applications are returned as incomplete before processing even begins (IRCC, 2025). Preparation matters.
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Spousal Sponsorship Services in Toronto
Spousal sponsorship is one of the most common – and most scrutinized – immigration pathways in Canada. IRCC officers assess every application for relationship genuineness, and incomplete or poorly documented applications risk refusal, delays, and months of additional separation.
Our immigration lawyers prepare spousal and partner sponsorship applications with the documentation and supporting evidence that IRCC officers are trained to look for. We also handle parent and grandparent sponsorship (PGP), dependent child applications, and other eligible family class categories.
“Sutton Law made the complex family sponsorship process straight forward and stress-free. Their knowledgeable team guided me every step of the way, ensuring all documentation was accurate and submitted promptly. Thanks to their expertise, my spouse is now a permanent resident of Canada. I highly recommend their services to anyone seeking family reunification.”
Proven Track Record
Thousands of immigration cases handled across spousal, parental, and dependent sponsorship categories.
Responsive Client Communication
We keep you updated at every stage of your sponsorship application and respond to inquiries within one business day.
Licensed Ontario Lawyers
Regulated by the Law Society of Ontario. Full professional liability coverage.
Every Day Apart Is a Day Too Long
Family sponsorship timelines depend on program type, country of origin, and application quality. A complete, well-prepared application avoids the delays that cost families months of additional separation. We help you get it right the first time.
Submit your details below for a free eligibility assessment. We will review your situation and contact you within one business day to discuss your sponsorship options.
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Submitting this form does not create a lawyer-client relationship.
A formal retainer agreement is required before legal advice is provided.
This form is for initial assessment purposes only.
Why Experience Matters in Family Sponsorship
Family sponsorship applications are assessed by IRCC officers against specific eligibility criteria – income thresholds, relationship
genuineness, admissibility requirements, and documentation standards. An incomplete or poorly prepared application risks refusal, which triggers delays, appeal costs, and extended separation from your family.
Our immigration lawyers have handled family sponsorship cases for over 30 years across the Greater Toronto Area. That depth of experience means we know what officers look for, what raises red flags, and how to present your application to meet IRCC’s standards.
Three Decades of Immigration Practice
Over 30 years of handling immigration matters across all sponsorship categories – spousal, parental, dependent child, conjugal, and other eligible family members. Our firm has navigated multiple policy changes, program redesigns, and processing backlogs, and we apply that institutional knowledge
to every new file we open.
Current on IRCC Policies and Processing Changes
Immigration rules change. Processing times fluctuate. Program intakes open and close on schedules that shift annually. We monitor IRCC operational bulletins, processing time updates, and policy changes so your application reflects the most current requirements – not outdated guidance.
We also prepare clients for potential interviews, additional document requests, and procedural letters from IRCC, so nothing in the process comes as a surprise.
Family Sponsorship Programs We Handle
Each sponsorship category has different eligibility criteria, documentation requirements, and processing timelines. Below are the programs our immigration lawyers handle regularly.
About Canada's Family Class Programs
Family sponsorship is one of Canada's primary immigration pathways. It allows Canadian citizens and permanent residents to sponsor eligible family members for permanent residence. Sponsors must meet income requirements and sign an undertaking to financially support the sponsored person for a specified period.
Eligibility Requirements
Sponsors must be Canadian citizens or permanent residents, at least 18 years old, and meet minimum income thresholds (for parent and grandparent sponsorship). The sponsored person must pass admissibility checks including medical, criminal, and security screening. We assess your eligibility before you invest time and fees in the application.
Spousal and Partner Sponsorship
Spousal sponsorship applies to legally married spouses, common-law partners (12+ months of cohabitation), and conjugal partners (where legal or immigration barriers prevent cohabitation). IRCC assesses the genuineness of the relationship through documentation, photographs, communication records, and in some cases, interviews. We help you build a clear, well-documented application.
Parent and Grandparent Sponsorship
The PGP program opens annually with a limited number of invitations. Sponsors must demonstrate they meet the Minimum Necessary Income (MNI) for three consecutive tax years. We assist with income verification, the application itself, and - if needed - Super Visa applications as an interim solution while you wait for PGP intake.
Dependent Child Sponsorship
Canadian citizens and permanent residents can sponsor dependent children under 22 years of age (or over 22 if financially dependent due to a medical condition). We handle the documentation to demonstrate dependency and ensure the application meets IRCC's evidentiary standards.
Other Eligible Family Members
In certain circumstances, you may be able to sponsor other relatives - such as siblings, nephews, or nieces - if you have no other sponsorable family members in Canada or abroad. We assess whether you qualify under IRCC's "lonely Canadian" provision and prepare the supporting documentation.
When Applications Are Refused or Delayed
Not every family sponsorship application is approved on the first attempt. Refusals can occur due to insufficient evidence of a genuine relationship, incomplete documentation, income shortfalls, or inadmissibility findings. IRCC may also issue procedural fairness letters or request additional documents, creating delays that extend processing times by months.
Refusals and Appeals
If your application is refused, you may have the right to appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board. Our firm has successfully argued appeals at the IAD and, when necessary, pursued judicial review at the Federal Court. In one recent case, we obtained a Federal Court order requiring IRCC to reassess a refused spousal sponsorship application.
Responding to IRCC Document Requests
Requests for additional documentation are common, particularly in spousal and conjugal partner applications where IRCC questions the genuineness of the relationship. We help you prepare a clear, organized response that directly addresses the officer's concerns - reducing the risk of a negative decision based on incomplete information.
Client Testimonials
Michelle Howard
Florence Brady
What an amazing service! They have helped my family many times throughout various complicated issues we had to deal with. Highly knowledgeable and experienced professionals that followed up on every detail.
Mr Alex is a very experienced, competent and knowledgeable lawyer. I highly recommend him for any immigration issue. He initiated a mandamus for the delay of my application for Permanent Residency and I received my PPR within a week after starting the process. Thank you so much for everything.
Cassandra Hyler
What Most Spousal Sponsorship Applicants Don’t Know
27% of inland spousal applications returned as incomplete
In 2025, IRCC returned over 12,000 inland spousal sponsorship applications because they failed the R10 completeness check - before an officer even looked at the merits of the case.
Relationship genuineness is the #1 refusal ground
Section 4 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations is the most common reason spousal applications are refused. IRCC officers assess whether the relationship was entered into primarily for immigration purposes - and the burden of proof is on you.
Outland stream is currently ~6 months faster than inland
In 2026, outland spousal sponsorship applications are processing approximately 6 months faster than inland applications. Choosing the wrong stream at the start can add half a year to your wait.
Signing a sponsorship undertaking is a 3-year financial commitment
When you sponsor a spouse, you sign a legally binding undertaking to financially support them for 3 years. If the relationship breaks down during that period, you remain responsible - even if your spouse receives social assistance. Many sponsors don't realize this until it's too late.
IRCC interviews are more common than you think
If an officer has doubts about relationship genuineness - especially for recent marriages, large age gaps, or limited in-person contact - they can request an interview. Being unprepared for the interview is one of the most common reasons for refusal at the final stage.
FAQ on Spousal Sponsorship Law
To sponsor a spouse or common-law partner, you must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident and at least 18 years old. There is no minimum income requirement for spousal sponsorship (unlike PGP). However, you cannot sponsor if you are receiving social assistance for reasons other than disability. We confirm your eligibility during the free assessment.
Processing times depend on whether you apply inland or outland. As of 2026, outland applications are processing faster – approximately 10–14 months. Inland applications typically take 10–18 months but allow the sponsored person to remain in Canada and apply for an open work permit. We help you choose the right stream based on your specific situation.
The most common refusal ground is a finding that the relationship is not genuine or was entered into primarily for immigration purposes (IRPR Section 4). IRCC officers look at the history of the
relationship, communication evidence, photos, shared finances, and third-party declarations. Insufficient documentation is the most
preventable cause of refusal.
It depends on your circumstances. Inland allows the sponsored person to stay in Canada and apply for an open work permit during processing. Outland is currently faster by approximately 6 months and preserves full appeal rights to the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) if refused. We assess your situation and recommend the stream that best fits your priorities.
Yes. There is no minimum marriage duration. However, IRCC scrutinizes recent marriages more closely. Applications involving short relationships require stronger supporting evidence – detailed
communication records, travel history, photos from different time periods, and statutory declarations from people who know the relationship. We help you build the evidence package that IRCC expects to see.
If your application is refused, you may have the right to appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) if you applied outland. Inland
refusals have more limited appeal options – typically judicial review at the Federal Court. Our firm handles both IAD appeals and Federal Court applications. In some cases, refusals can be overcome by reapplying with stronger evidence.
We offer a free initial eligibility assessment. Fees for full representation depend on the complexity of your case – straight forward inland applications differ from outland applications involving interview preparation or previous refusals. We provide a clear fee quote before you commit. IRCC government fees (approximately $1,290 for a couple with no dependents) are separate and payable directly to IRCC.