Refusals & Appeals
When an Application Is Refused
A refusal is not always the end of the road. Depending on the type of decision, you may be able to ask the officer to reconsider, appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD), or ask the Federal Court to review the decision. Each route has its own rules — and strict, unforgiving deadlines. Understanding which option applies to your case, and acting quickly, is what protects your rights.
01 Understanding a Refusal
When Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) or the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) refuses an application or issues a negative decision, you will normally receive a letter explaining the outcome. What you can do next depends entirely on the type of decision — not every refusal carries the same recourse.
Because every avenue runs on a short clock that starts when you receive the decision, it is important to read the refusal carefully and get advice promptly. This page gives general information about the main options; it is not legal advice, and no outcome can be guaranteed.
02 Common Reasons for Refusal
Refusal letters are often written in template language, so the real reasoning may not be obvious. Across application types, the most frequent grounds include:
- the officer was not satisfied you would leave Canada at the end of an authorized stay (temporary applications)
- insufficient or unconvincing proof of funds or financial support
- incomplete documents, missing forms, or unanswered requests for information
- doubts about the genuineness of a relationship in a sponsorship application
- concerns about the purpose of travel, ties to the home country, or immigration history
- inadmissibility — for example on medical, criminal, security, or misrepresentation grounds
- not meeting a specific program requirement or, for permanent residents, the residency obligation
03 GCMS Notes & Understanding the Reasons
To respond effectively, you usually need to see the officer's actual reasoning, not just the template refusal letter. That reasoning lives in IRCC's Global Case Management System (GCMS). The notes are obtained through an Access to Information and Privacy (ATIP) request.
- requests for your own personal records are made under the Privacy Act (no fee); broader records can be requested under the Access to Information Act (a $5 fee)
- requests are submitted through the federal ATIP Online Request tool, or by mail using IRCC's form
- to request your own records, you generally must be a Canadian citizen, a permanent resident, or a person currently in Canada (a representative can request on your behalf with consent)
04 Your Options After a Refusal
Depending on the decision, one or more of the following paths may be open to you. They are not all available in every case, and some cannot be combined — choosing the right one matters.
Request for Reconsideration
In some cases you can ask the same office to reconsider its decision — for example where the notes show an officer overlooked evidence already on file. Reconsideration is discretionary, not a formal right, and it does not stop other deadlines from running.
Re-apply With a Stronger Application
Where there is no right of appeal and a quick fix is possible, submitting a new, better-supported application is sometimes the most practical route. The notes help identify exactly what to address.
Appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD)
Where the law provides a right of appeal — such as overseas family sponsorship refusals, certain removal orders, and residency obligation decisions — the IAD of the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) can hear the case fresh on its merits.
Appeal at Another IRB Division
Most failed refugee claimants can appeal a Refugee Protection Division decision to the Refugee Appeal Division (RAD), where that right is available. Different rules and deadlines apply.
Judicial Review at the Federal Court
When no appeal exists, or to challenge an appeal decision, you can ask the Federal Court for leave (permission) to review the decision. The Court looks at the legality of the decision — it does not re-decide the application itself.
05 Appeal vs. Judicial Review
These two routes are often confused, but they ask very different questions. Understanding the difference helps set realistic expectations about what each one can achieve.
Appeal (IAD / RAD)
A fresh look at the merits. The tribunal can substitute its own decision, and in many appeals you can present new evidence and testimony — sometimes including humanitarian and compassionate factors.
Judicial Review (Federal Court)
A review of the decision's legality — was it reasonable and procedurally fair? The Court does not re-decide your case. If it agrees there was an error, it usually sends the matter back to a different officer to be decided again.
06 Who Has a Right of Appeal
A right of appeal to the IAD exists only where the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) provides it. The IAD hears three main types of immigration appeals:
- Sponsorship appeals — by a Canadian citizen or permanent resident sponsor whose application to sponsor a close overseas family member was refused
- Removal order appeals — by permanent residents, protected persons, and foreign nationals holding a permanent resident visa (subject to limits for serious inadmissibility)
- Residency obligation appeals — by a permanent resident found by an officer abroad not to have met their residency obligation
07 Time Limits You Cannot Miss
Every route runs on a deadline that starts when you receive the decision. Missing it can extinguish the option, so these dates must be calendared immediately.
- IAD sponsorship appeal: the Notice of Appeal must be received within 30 days of receiving the refusal decision
- IAD removal order appeal: within 30 days of receiving the removal order
- IAD residency obligation appeal: within 60 days of receiving the decision
- Federal Court — leave & judicial review (IRPA s.72): served and filed within 15 days for a matter arising in Canada, or 60 days for a matter arising outside Canada, after you are notified of the decision
Limited extensions may be possible — the IAD can consider a late appeal, and a Federal Court judge may allow extra time "for special reasons" — but extensions are never guaranteed. Treat the original deadline as firm and seek advice well before it expires.
08 Frequently Asked Questions
My visitor / study / work permit was refused — can I appeal it?+
What's the difference between an appeal and a judicial review?+
How long do I have to challenge a refusal?+
What are GCMS notes and do I need them?+
Does a refusal stay on my record or affect future applications?+
Can BroadGate represent me?+
Talk to a Licensed Expert
Refused? Act before the clock runs out.
Deadlines after a refusal are short and unforgiving. Our licensed team can review your decision, explain your options, and help you move quickly and confidently.
