Help Center
Help Centre
What does the Government of Canada consider to be a common-law relationship?
You may apply to sponsor a common-law partner, of the opposite sex or the same sex. If so, you have to prove you have been living with your partner for at least 12 consecutive months in a relationship like a marriage.
That means living together for one year without any long periods where you did not see each other. Either partner may have left the home for work or business travel, family obligations, and so on. However, that separation must have been temporary and short.
A common-law relationship ends when at least one partner does not intend to continue it.
Answers others found useful
- Which family members may come with me to Canada when I immigrate?
- How can I check the status of my sponsorship application?
- I want to sponsor my parents, grandparents, a newly adopted child or another relative. How do I do this?
- How do I sponsor my spouse, partner or dependent child to become a permanent resident of Canada?
- How long will it take to process my application to sponsor someone to live in Canada?
- Date Modified:
