Canada, as one of the most developed countries in the world, attracts hundreds of thousands people to come and start their new life.
Why Choose Us
We are immigration consultants who are regulated by the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC), the former Immigration Consultants of Canada Regulatory Council (ICCRC). The CICC is the only designatory body by Canada's Immigration and Refugee Protection Act to regulate its members known as Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultants (RCICs) who are authorized to practice immigration law in Canada besides lawyers.
Even though immigration to Canada can be exciting, the processes can be complicated and difficult. You will need to be very familiar with different programs and visa types, and a small error you make may lead to the refusal to your application. Any refusal to your visa applications will have a big impact on your future visa applications not only to Canada but also other countries.
We are experienced and knowledgeable in Canadian immigration laws and programs and we can match you with the most suitable immigration program. You will save a lot of time and costs to get the ideal results.
Many immigration consulting firms show clients different programs and have clients choose from them. This approach neglects clients' own backgrounds and may lead to an improper choice and will bring many troubles in the coming long immigration process.
We use a client-based approach. Each of our clients will be evaluated with their unique credentials and we match them with the most suitable immigration pathway.
Want to have a free assessment? Please click HERE.
We provide a free no-obligation consultation to each of our clients. This consultation will be 30 minutes, and you will have face-to-face consultation with our immigration consultants online.
Want to talk to our consultants and know more about your potential? Please click HERE to book your consultation.
Our Immigration Programs
One of the most popular pathway to obtain permanent residency in Canada is through the Provincial Nominee Programs (PNP). Provinces in Canada set different programs to have skilled workers, business professionals, entrepreneurs and people of other various backgrounds to live in the province.
The applicant will need to apply to a province under the province's immigration programs or streams. If the application is approved, the applicant will be nominated and issued a certificate of nomination. Then, the applicant will need to apply to the Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) with the certificate of nomination to apply for permanent residence.
We represent clients under many provincial nominee programs including Ontario, Saskatchewan, etc. Our clients includes skilled workers and entrepreneurs, and we help them to find an eligible employer or set up their business and prepare their applications for permanent residence.
Want to know if the PNP is the right program for you? Click HERE for a free assessment.
Express Entry, also known as "EE", is not an immigration program of its own. It is more like a scoring system to evaluate candidates who are eligible for the three most common skilled workers programs:
- the Canadian Experience Class
- the Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSW)
- the Federal Skilled Trade Program (FST)
Candidates meeting the minimum requirements of these programs will be scored based on their language proficiency, working experiences, ages, etc., according to the Express Entry scoring system named Comprehensive Ranking System (CRS) Criteria. Their profiles will then be placed in the candidates pool. Periodically, the Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada will conduct a draw of the candidates based on certain scores. If a Candidate gets the "draw", they will be invited to apply for permanent residence.
Want to know if the PNP is the right program for you? Click HERE for a free assessment.
Canadian citizens and permanent residents can sponsor some types of their family members to come to Canada as permanent residents to reunite with them. If you are a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, you may be able to sponsor your:
- spouse
- children (under 22 years old)
- parents or grandparents
- other relatives (subject to eligibility requirements).
Thinking of bringing some of your family members to Canada? Contact Us today.
Canada has many programs for foreign nationals to come to Canada to travel, to visit family members, to study and to work.
If you want to come to visit or travel in Canada and your country of citizenship is not among the visa exempted countries designated by Canada, you will need to apply for a visitor visa.
If you want to study in Canada, you will first need to be admitted to an eligible academic program. We help our clients to apply for the programs they want to study and apply for the study permit once the client is admitted.
If you want to work in Canada, you will need a work permit. Canada has a wide range of work permit programs for international workers, such as the post-graduation work permit, LMIA-based work permit, etc.
Please contact us now to get more information.
Permanent Resident Card (PR Card) is issued by the Government of Canada to the permanent residents. It can be used to show the PR status and enter Canada after traveling abroad. The PR card is valid for five years and can be renewed as long as you have permanent resident status.
We help clients apply for new permanent resident cards when their current cards are expiring or expired so that they can travel to other countries or use the cards as their IDs. Please be advised that you DO NOT lose your PR status if your PR card expires.
Need help to get a new card? Please contact us.
After you get your permanent residence, what's the next step?
The answer is quite obvious: become a Canadian!
Obtaining Canadian citizenship is very rewarding. As a Canadian, you can have Canadian passport, you can vote, and you will have much more rights than being a permanent resident.
To become a Canadian citizen, most applicants must
- be a permanent resident
- have lived in Canada for at least 3 out of the last 5 years (1,095 days)
- have filed their taxes
- pass a citizenship test
- prove their language skills in English or French
- Other requirements may apply.
Need our help to apply for your Canadian citizenship? Please contact us now!
Did find the programs you want to know? Contact Us now.
Our Immigration Advocacy
Section 28 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act imposes a residency obligation on permanent residents. It requires that a permanent resident must be physically living in Canada for 730 days in a five-year period. You may lose your permanent resident status if you do not obey this obligation.
However, if you lose your permanent resident status due to the failure of obeying the residency obligation, you do have a right to appeal through the Immigration and Refugee Board, and we are here to provide advocacy for you. Please contact us immediately.
Canada is a welcoming country and protects many refugees from other countries who are facing with torturing, persecutions, etc. If you make a refugee claim in Canada, you will be facing a refugee hearing at the Immigration and Refugee Board. This is a crucial hearing because it determines whether your claim will be accepted and you can stay in Canada to become a permanent resident.
Our legal team will provide advocacies to the clients in need. If you are seeking asylum, please contact us.
If a foreign national or permanent resident is being detained by the The Canadian Border Services Agency (CBSA), a detention review hearing will occur. This hearing will decide if the detainee should be released or continue to be detained.
If the CBSA has reason to believe that you should not enter or remain in Canada, You may be ordered to appear before the Immigration Division for an admissibility hearing.
Our legal team will provide advocacies to the clients in need. If you are being detained or if you are facing deportation, please contact us.
Stay beyond your authorized period? Loss of status? Other issues? Please contact us now.
Our Success Stories
Client Z is a Chinese national and a permanent resident of Canada. Since becoming a permanent resident, he established business both in China and Canada and managed to meet his residency obligation.
However, during his last trip in China, the Covid-19 pandemic broke out, he got stuck there, failed to meet the 730-day residency obligation, and his PR card was expired. When he applied for a permanent resident travel document, his application was refused and his explanation that he could not have travelled to Canada due to Covid-19 was not accepted by the IRCC because Canada did not imposed restrictions on permanent residents to travel to Canada.
In the appeal hearing, we successfully established our argument that the restrictions imposed by China should also be considered in this case. The Client's most close family member was seriously ill and needed the Client's care. If the Client travelled to Canada at that time, it would have been extremely difficult to go back to China if his family member needed his immediate care, because the whole China was under strict lockdown. We further argued that there were other flaws in the findings of the decision-maker.
Our arguments were taken and the appeal was allowed. This Client has been issued with a Permanent Resident Travel Document and is on his way back to Canada.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, Canada launched a Temporary Residence to Permanent Residence Pathway for international graduates who were working in Canada to apply for permanent residence.
For Client X, his work permit was expiring and his score was very unlikely to be selected through the Express Entry. So we had to help him take this opportunity. The number of the application was overwhelming and we anticipated that. On the day when the program was open, the online payment system was down and many applicants failed to pay for the application fees. However, we prepared everything we could do right in advance. We estimated the total application fees and paid it one day before the opening. We also anticipated many common immigration forms and required documents before the official launch of the program and pre-finished them. When the program requirements were released, we immediately adjusted our forms and documents. On the day when we can submit the application, we submit it within the first 10 minutes.
Our Client X got his PR approved two month after submission.
Client C is a Hong Kong resident who were working in Canada. She studied in Canada and was on the post-graduation work permit. In Summer 2021, Canada launched a special permanent residence pathway program for Hong Kong residents who graduated from a Canadian institution. However, there was a cut-off period for the graduation dates to be eligible for this program, and our client only had one week left to submit before the cut-off period when the program was launched.
When the client retained us, we immediately prepared all the forms and documents and had them ready within three days. There were some documents we did having difficulties preparing them and we provided detailed explanation letters to the IRCC. Our application package was submitted through IRCC's special portal for Hong Kong residents right on time and we managed to submit all the missing documents within two weeks.
Three months after the submission, Client C's application was approved and now she lives in Ottawa with her family.