Immigration to canada / June 10, 2025

Declaring Spouse As Non-Accompanying Can Risk PR Dreams

Immigration consultant Kubeir Kamal explained that in the past, many married people have applied for immigration without including their spouses in the application to increase their chances of success. He added that this practice is now being seen more often. Toronto Star

Canada's Express Entry system helps skilled workers get permanent residency. It ranks applicants through a points-based system called CRS (Comprehensive Ranking System). Age, education, work experience, and English or French skills all count.

Married people often get fewer points than single applicants. To gain more points, some married applicants declare their spouse as “non-accompanying.” This means the spouse won’t move to Canada with them during the PR process. This strategy can add up to 40 points.

But if the spouse is actually in Canada, it raises red flags. Immigration officials may question this choice.

Why IRCC Sends Procedural Fairness Letters (PFLs)

If something seems off, the immigration department (IRCC) sends a Procedural Fairness Letter (PFL). This gives applicants a chance to explain. They usually get 7–30 days to respond.
Common reasons for receiving a PFL:

  • Spouse lives and works in Canada
  • Address shows the couple lives together
  • Spouse refuses medical or biometric exams
  • Applicants fail to report updates like spouse moving to Canada
  • Reasons given for “non-accompanying” are unclear or inconsistent

IRCC wants honest answers and strong evidence. If not provided, it may reject the application or even accuse the applicant of misrepresentation.

The Risk Of Misrepresentation

Misrepresentation happens when someone gives wrong or incomplete information. Under Canadian law, even a mistake can count.
Consequences include:

  • Application refusal
  • A five-year ban from reapplying
  • Losing PR status later
  • Long-term damage to your immigration record

Declaring a non-accompanying spouse is allowed if the reason is valid. But if lives with you in Canada, you need a clear, truthful explanation.

Real-Life Scenarios That Cause Trouble

  1. Spouse Already in Canada If your spouse works or studies in Canada and you live together, IRCC may ask why you’re saying they won’t stay with you.
  2. Not Reporting Spouse’s Move to Canada If you don’t update your profile after your spouse arrives in Canada, it can be seen as hiding facts.
  3. Spouse Avoiding Exams If a non-accompanying spouse refuses medicals or biometrics, IRCC may see it as an attempt to avoid checks.
  4. Poor Explanations Telling IRCC your spouse isn’t joining “for personal reasons” isn’t enough. You need proof—like a job abroad or family obligations.
  5. Plan to Sponsor Later Some applicants try to get more points by listing the spouse as non-accompanying, then plan to sponsor them later. IRCC now catches this tactic and takes it seriously.

How To Avoid A PFL

Here’s what experts suggest:

  • Always declare your spouse’s status truthfully
  • Provide proof—marriage certificates, job letters, travel plans
  • Update IRCC if your situation changes
  • Write a clear explanation letter
  • Consult a licensed immigration expert for guidance

What To Do If You Receive A PFL

If IRCC sends you a Procedural Fairness Letter:

  • Read it carefully
  • Understand IRCC’s concerns
  • Collect documents to support your case
  • Be honest
  • Consider getting help from a lawyer
  • Ask for extra time if needed
  • In rare cases, withdraw the application (with professional advice)

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