Permanent Residence from Within Canada
Humanitarian & Compassionate Grounds
Humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) consideration is an exceptional pathway to permanent residence for people in Canada who would not otherwise qualify under an existing immigration class. Decided case-by-case under section 25(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, it asks an officer to weigh your real-life circumstances — and it is entirely discretionary, with no guaranteed outcome.
01 What H&C Consideration Is
Section 25(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) allows foreign nationals in Canada who are inadmissible or who do not meet the requirements of an immigration class to ask Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) for permanent residence, or for an exemption from a requirement of the Act, based on humanitarian and compassionate considerations.
Because each decision turns on a person's individual situation, there are no fixed pass/fail thresholds. Instead, an officer conducts a global, case-by-case assessment of the circumstances you present, taking into account the best interests of any child directly affected.
02 Who It's For
H&C consideration is intended for people whose situation is compelling enough to justify an exemption from the usual rules. It may be relevant if you:
- are physically in Canada and would not normally be eligible to become a permanent resident
- have built a meaningful life here and would face genuine hardship if required to leave
- have strong family ties in Canada, or are responsible for a child whose interests would be affected
- cannot reasonably resolve your status through an ordinary economic, family, or refugee pathway
03 Factors Officers Weigh
IRCC assesses H&C applications holistically: factors are not judged in isolation but considered cumulatively. The elements officers commonly look at include:
Establishment in Canada
How settled you are — employment, studies, community involvement, time spent here, and ties you have built.
Best Interests of a Child
The best interests of any child directly affected by the decision are given significant, substantive weight.
Hardship if Returned
What could happen to you if the request is not granted — including personal vulnerability, health, and adverse conditions in your home country.
Family Ties to Canada
Your relationships and dependencies here, and what separation from family members would mean for you and for them.
Officers may also weigh health considerations and any other unique or exceptional circumstances you raise. The burden is on you to provide compelling evidence for the exemption you are requesting.
04 What H&C Does Not Consider
H&C is not a substitute for the refugee system. Under section 25(1.3) of IRPA, when examining a request made from inside Canada, an officer:
- may not consider the risk factors used to decide whether someone is a Convention refugee (section 96) or a person in need of protection (section 97) — such as a risk of persecution, torture, or cruel and unusual treatment
- must, however, consider the elements of hardship that affect you, even where the underlying facts overlap with risk
05 Limits, Bars & One Application Rule
Several statutory limits restrict who can have an H&C request examined and when:
- One at a time: a person may only have one H&C application under consideration at any given time
- Pending refugee claim: IRCC cannot examine an H&C request while you have a refugee claim pending before the Refugee Protection Division or Refugee Appeal Division
- The 12-month bar ("one-year bar"): generally you cannot apply if you received a negative IRB decision within the last 12 months
- Certain inadmissibilities excluded: H&C is not available to overcome the most serious inadmissibilities, such as security, human or international rights violations, or organized criminality
06 How to Apply
An H&C application is built around the specific exemption you are asking for and the evidence that supports it. The general process is:
Confirm You Are Eligible to Apply
Check that no bar applies — no pending refugee claim, no recent negative IRB decision within the bar period, and no other H&C application already in progress.
Identify the Exemption(s) You Need
Clearly state the specific requirement of the Act you are asking to be exempted from, and the reasons why an exemption is justified on H&C grounds.
Build Your Evidence
Assemble documents that show establishment, family ties, the best interests of any affected child, and the hardship you would face — letters, records, and a detailed personal statement.
Complete the IRCC Forms & Pay the Fees
Prepare the application package and pay the applicable processing fees. Submit according to the current IRCC instructions for your situation.
Respond to Requests and Await a Decision
You may be asked for biometrics, a medical exam, or additional information. Because the decision is discretionary, processing can take time and the outcome is not guaranteed.
07 Fees & What to Expect
An H&C application carries the standard permanent-residence processing fee, plus the Right of Permanent Residence Fee (RPRF) that most applicants pay before becoming a permanent resident.
Processing times for H&C applications vary considerably from case to case and are not fixed. A successful H&C decision can lead to permanent residence, but because the process is discretionary, no timeline or result can be promised.
08 Frequently Asked Questions
Is H&C a guaranteed way to get permanent residence?+
Can I apply for H&C while my refugee claim is pending?+
Can I have more than one H&C application at the same time?+
Does H&C consider the risk I would face in my home country?+
What factors carry the most weight?+
How much does an H&C application cost?+
Talk to a Licensed Expert
Is H&C the right path for you?
Our licensed immigration consultants (RCICs regulated by the CICC) can help you assess whether H&C fits your situation, frame your circumstances accurately, and build a well-evidenced application.
