Protection at the Removal Stage
The Pre-Removal Risk Assessment in Canada
A Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) is a last opportunity for certain people facing removal from Canada to show they would be at risk if returned to their home country. It is a serious, time-sensitive process with strict deadlines — and you can only apply if a Canada Border Services Agency officer notifies you that you are eligible. This page explains, in plain language, how a PRRA works and what to do if you receive a notification.
01 What a PRRA Is
A Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) is an application that lets certain people who are facing removal from Canada ask for protection from being sent to a country where they would be at risk. It is decided by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), while the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) manages the removal process.
According to IRCC, a PRRA is used to make sure you are not removed to a country where:
- you would be at risk of persecution
- you would be in danger of torture
- there would be a risk to your life or of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment
02 Who Can Apply & Who Is Barred
You cannot apply for a PRRA on your own initiative. When the CBSA begins the removal process, an officer checks whether you are eligible. You can only apply for a PRRA if a CBSA officer tells you that you are eligible and gives you a notification package.
Per IRCC guidance, you generally cannot apply for a PRRA if you:
- made a refugee claim that was ineligible because of the Safe Third Country Agreement
- were found to be a Convention refugee in another country to which you can return
- are already a protected person with refugee protection in Canada
- are subject to extradition
People who may be assessed include failed refugee claimants now facing removal and certain individuals under a removal order. Because eligibility rules and recent legislative changes can shift the categories, confirm your own situation against your CBSA notification and the official IRCC page rather than relying on a general description.
03 The 12-Month Waiting Period
A one-year bar limits repeat applications. In most cases, you must wait 12 months after your last negative decision before you can apply for a PRRA. According to IRCC, this waiting period applies if:
- you received a negative decision from the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) on a refugee claim
- you received a negative decision from IRCC on a previous PRRA application
- you abandoned or withdrew your refugee claim or your PRRA application
- the Federal Court refused your attempt to have your refugee claim or PRRA decision reviewed
04 How to Apply When Notified
Once a CBSA officer confirms you are eligible and gives you a PRRA notification, the process moves quickly and on fixed deadlines. The general steps are:
Receive Your PRRA Notification from CBSA
A CBSA officer informs you in person that you are eligible and provides the notification and application package. Note every date and deadline it contains.
Complete and Return the Application on Time
The notification sets strict deadlines to submit your application and your supporting evidence. These deadlines are firm and extensions are rarely granted — confirm the exact timeframes on your own package and do not assume the dates from any general source.
Submit Your Written Submissions and Evidence
A PRRA is usually decided on the documents you file. Set out the risk you fear and provide objective evidence supporting it. Strong, well-organized submissions are critical because there is often no hearing.
Attend a Hearing Only If Requested
IRCC normally decides based on the paperwork, but may schedule a hearing if it has questions — for example, about your credibility. If so, you will receive a notice with the date and the issues to be discussed.
Receive the Decision
The CBSA informs you in person of IRCC's decision on your PRRA application.
05 Positive vs Negative Decision
The outcome of a PRRA has major consequences for whether you can stay in Canada.
If Your Application Is Accepted
In most cases you become a protected person, and you can then apply for permanent residence. In some cases — for example, where someone is inadmissible for serious criminality — protected-person status is not granted even if a risk is found, and the person is instead allowed to stay until it is safe to return.
If Your Application Is Rejected
You must leave Canada. You may apply to the Federal Court of Canada for judicial review of the decision, but a court challenge does not automatically pause removal — you must still leave unless the Court grants you a stay of removal.
06 What to Prepare
Because a PRRA is usually decided on the documents you submit, the quality and organization of your evidence matter a great deal. While each case is different, applicants commonly gather:
- your CBSA notification package and any related identity and immigration documents
- a clear written account of the risk you fear and why returning would be dangerous
- personal evidence — affidavits, medical or police reports, threats, or other proof relevant to your situation
- country-condition evidence such as reputable human-rights and news reports about your home country
- any new evidence that arose after, or was not reasonably available during, an earlier refugee claim
- translations of any documents that are not in English or French
07 Frequently Asked Questions
Can I apply for a PRRA whenever I want?+
Why do I have to wait 12 months to apply?+
Can I stay in Canada while my PRRA is being decided?+
What happens if my PRRA is approved?+
What can I do if my PRRA is refused?+
Is a PRRA the same as a refugee claim?+
Talk to a Licensed Expert
Served with a PRRA notification?
PRRA deadlines are short and the stakes are high. Our licensed immigration consultants (RCICs regulated by the CICC) can help you understand your notification, organize your evidence, and respond on time and with confidence.
This page is general information, not legal advice, and no outcome is guaranteed. For advice on your situation, confirm the current rules on the official IRCC pages and speak with a licensed representative.
