Terms of Our Service

Arranged Employment Offer:
The Canada Visa assistance service will on behalf of the applicant, secure an AEO ( Arranged employment offer) from a registered Canadian company in Canada for and on behalf of the applicant who is desirous of migrating to Canada on a live & work Basis. No fee is required from the applicant to secure a Job offer, according to the terms of our service.

The Canadian Visa assistance service will also negotiate for and on Behalf of the applicant with the HRSDC for the issue of a positive LMIA(Labor Market Impact Assessment) for the employee as a prerequisite to obtain the Temporary Work Permit, No fee is required from the applicant for this service.

Temporary work permit Processing:
After the successful application and positively securing a Job with a registered company in Canada, Each person applying for a Canada Immigration Visa/Temporary work permit must pay this processing fee to the Canada Visa assistance service, the fee to be paid should cover for:

The principal applicant
An accompanying spouse, common-law or conjugal partner; and
Dependent children.

Once the Canadian Immigration Visa Office has begun screening an application, the fee becomes non-refundable, although it remains refundable anytime before that point.

A compulsory process fee of 650$ is required to cover for the cost of process of the Temporary Work Permit through the Canadian Home Immigration Office in Ottawa.

Country of Nationality
A person’s country of nationality is the country in which he or she was born. If a person is born in Canada, he or she will be a Canadian citizen, but citizenship is not the same as nationality. A person can be a citizen of Canada without having been born there. Country of nationality must also be distinguished from country of residence since where one is born is not necessarily where that person currently lives.

Country of Residence
A person’s country of residence is the country in which he or she has legal permission to live. The person must have also legally entered the country and currently reside there.

Criminality
Criminality, like “serious criminality,” can result in criminal inadmissibility and serve as the basis for being denied entry to Canada. However, unlike serious criminality, criminality is grounds for inadmissibility to Canada when a foreign national has been convicted inside Canada of an indictable offence punishable by a sentence of less than 10 years, or has committed an equivalent offence outside Canada that would be punishable by 10 years or more if the act had been committed in Canada.

Criminal Inadmissibility
Individuals wishing to enter Canada either permanently or temporarily as visitors, may not be allowed into Canada if they have committed or been convicted of a crime.

A person may be considered criminally inadmissible on grounds of either criminality or serious criminality, both of which are defined in this glossary. Theft, dangerous driving, assault, manslaughter, and murder are examples of crimes that might make one criminally inadmissible.

Criminal Rehabilitation
Individuals with a criminal record rendering them criminally inadmissible may still enter Canada depending on what crime was committed, how long ago it was committed, and how the individual has behaved since. The immigration officer must also be convinced that the individual is deemed rehabilitated, was approved for individual rehabilitation, was granted a record suspension, or has a temporary resident permit. See the definitions for deemed rehabilitation and individual rehabilitation below for more information.

Danger to Public Health or Safety
Individuals wishing to enter Canada either permanently or temporarily as visitors may not be allowed into Canada if they have a medical condition that could endanger public health or safety. A medical officer who is assessing the foreign national's health condition should consider whether the foreign national carries a contagious disease and the impact it may have on others living in Canada. With regards to public safety, an officer must assess the risk that a foreign national will behave violently or unpredictably and that these behaviors might create a danger to the health or safety of those living in Canada.

Dependent Child
A dependent child, in relation to a parent who is applying for residency in Canada, is either the biological or adopted child of the parent, who is under 19 years of age and is neither married nor in a common-law relationship. Children who are 19 years and older but who are unable to support themselves because they suffer from a mental or physical condition are also considered dependents.

If you have completely reviewed our service terms and conditions, and accepted, please click below to submit your job application form