How Much Does It Cost to Sponsor a Spouse to Canada? Complete 2026 Fee Breakdown
You found the person you want to spend your life with. They just live in another country.
So you search “how much does it cost to sponsor a spouse to Canada” and you find IRCC’s fee page showing $1,205 in processing fees. Simple, right?
Not even close.
That number is just the government’s take. There are medical exams. Police certificates from every country your partner has lived in. Certified translations. Possibly a consultant or lawyer. And if you live in Quebec, a whole other layer of fees and a bureaucratic freeze that could delay everything by a year.
This guide breaks it all down. Every number. Every category. No surprises.
Sources: IRCC fee schedule (verified March 2026); IRCC completeness data cited by CIC News, March 2026.
Key Takeaways: Your 2-Minute Briefing
- Government fees total $1,290 for a spouse with no children (sponsorship $85 + processing $545 + RPRF $575 + biometrics $85).
- Third-party costs add $300 to $800 for medical exams, police certificates, and certified translations.
- The RPRF ($575) is the only refundable fee. All other government fees are non-refundable once IRCC opens your file.
- Quebec residents face an additional $328 fee plus a provincial intake cap in effect until June 25, 2026.
- Professional representation costs $3,000 to $7,000+ and is optional but valuable for complex cases.
- 27% of inland applications in 2025 were returned incomplete, costing applicants months of delay and lost non-refundable fees.
- IRCC Government Fees: The Baseline Numbers
- The RPRF: The One Fee You Can Defer (and Get Back)
- Adding Dependent Children: Fee Changes
- Quebec Sponsorship: Extra Fees and the 2026 Freeze
- Third-Party Costs You Cannot Avoid
- Should You Hire a Consultant or Lawyer?
- Three Real-World Cost Scenarios
- What Fees Are Refundable?
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Are the IRCC Government Fees to Sponsor a Spouse in 2026?
Everything starts here. Before any third-party costs, before any professional fees, this is what you owe the Canadian government directly.
| Fee | Who Pays | Notes | Amount (CAD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sponsorship application fee | Sponsor | Covers the sponsor eligibility assessment Non-refundable | $85 |
| Principal applicant processing fee | Sponsored spouse | Covers IRCC’s processing of the PR application Non-refundable | $545 |
| Right of Permanent Residence Fee (RPRF) | Sponsored spouse | Can be deferred to end of processing Refundable | $575 |
| Biometrics | Sponsored spouse | Required for applicants age 14 to 79 Non-refundable | $85 |
| Total Government Fees (spouse only, no children) | $1,290 | ||
Source: IRCC Official Fee Schedule. Fees verified March 2026. IRCC adjusts fees periodically under the Service Fees Act. Always verify amounts on the official IRCC page before submitting.
These four fees are paid at the same time when you submit your application online through the IRCC PR portal. You cannot split payments across multiple sessions. Have your credit or debit card ready.
What Is the Right of Permanent Residence Fee and Should You Pay It Upfront?
The RPRF is $575 and it is special for two reasons. First, it is the only fee you can get back. Second, it is the only fee you can delay paying.
Here is the strategic calculation.
If you pay it upfront with your application, IRCC confirms receipt immediately and your file moves forward without interruption. This is what most applicants do, and it is the right call for most situations.
If you defer it, IRCC will send you a payment request near the end of processing. You then have a limited window to pay and confirm receipt. This can add two to four weeks to the end of your timeline when you are already close to bringing your partner home. For most couples, that extra wait is not worth the cash flow benefit.
The only time deferring makes sense is if money is genuinely tight and you need the $575 to cover other mandatory costs first, like medical exams or police certificates.
Getting your refund: If your application is refused or you withdraw before the visa is issued, submit a refund request to IRCC. The process takes up to eight weeks. You cannot get back the $85 sponsorship fee, the $545 processing fee, or the $85 biometrics fee once IRCC has opened your file.
What Are the Fees for Adding Dependent Children to a Sponsorship Application?
| Application | Govt Fees (CAD) | Biometrics | Total Govt Fees |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spouse only (no children) | $1,205 | $85 | $1,290 |
| Spouse + 1 child (under 14) | $1,205 + $260 | $85 (spouse only) | $1,550 |
| Spouse + 1 child (age 14 to 79) | $1,205 + $260 | $85 + $85 | $1,635 |
| Spouse + 2 children (both under 14) | $1,205 + $520 | $85 (spouse only) | $1,810 |
These are government fees only. Add medical exam costs for each child ($130 to $200 per child), police certificates for children aged 18+, and translation fees for any foreign-language documents.
Children under 14 are exempt from biometrics. Children 14 and over must provide biometrics. Each child also needs a separate immigration medical exam, which adds $130 to $200 per child to the third-party cost total.
What Are the Extra Costs for Quebec Spousal Sponsorship in 2026?
If you live in Quebec, you are playing by different rules. Canada and Quebec have a special arrangement under the Canada-Quebec Accord that gives Quebec sole authority over who settles in the province. This means sponsoring a spouse to Quebec requires two approvals: one from IRCC and one from Quebec’s provincial immigration ministry, MIFI.
| Quebec Fee | Amount (CAD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Provincial undertaking fee (sponsor) | $328 | Paid to MIFI. Not applicable during the current intake cap. |
| Per accompanying child (undertaking) | $132 | Per child, in addition to the sponsor undertaking fee. |
| Federal fees (same as above) | $1,290 | IRCC fees are the same regardless of province. |
| Total minimum for Quebec resident (spouse only) | $1,618 | |
The Quebec freeze means the real cost of sponsoring a spouse in Quebec right now is not measured only in dollars. It is measured in time. Applicants facing the freeze are looking at an additional six to twelve months of separation beyond the standard processing time. Factor this into your planning before submitting anything.
What Are the Third-Party Costs for Spousal Sponsorship in Canada?
This is where most couples get blindsided. The government fees are one thing. These costs are different. They go to hospitals, police agencies, translation firms, and courier services, not to IRCC. And every single one is mandatory.
Immigration Medical Exams: $175 to $280 Per Adult
Your partner must be examined by a panel physician designated by IRCC. These are private clinics authorized to conduct immigration medical exams. IRCC does not set their prices. Rates vary by location and province.
| Applicant Type | Typical Cost (CAD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Adult (18 to 45 years old) | $175 to $230 | Standard physical, blood work, chest X-ray if needed |
| Adult (45 years and over) | $200 to $280 | Additional tests required for older applicants |
| Child under 11 (no X-ray) | $130 to $160 | Reduced panel: no chest X-ray required |
| Child age 11 to 17 | $150 to $200 | Full exam with X-ray may be required |
Rates vary by panel physician and province. Confirm the exact cost directly with your designated panel physician before booking. Find IRCC-designated panel physicians at canada.ca.
Watch out for follow-up costs. If the exam reveals anything requiring further testing, the physician will charge additional furtherance fees plus the cost of specialist reports. Budget an extra $70 to $120 as a contingency.
Police Certificates: $40 to $200+ Depending on Country
Your partner needs a police certificate from every country where they have lived for six or more months since turning 18. If they have lived in multiple countries, costs multiply. The logistics (fingerprinting at a Canadian consulate, tracked courier envelopes) often cost as much as the certificate itself.
| Country | Certificate Fee | Typical Total with Logistics |
|---|---|---|
| Pakistan (NADRA) | Approx. $20 to $40 | $60 to $120 (including authentication and courier) |
| India (PCC) | Approx. $30 to $40 | $60 to $120 (BLS service fees and courier) |
| United Kingdom (ACRO) | GBP 65 to 115 (~$115 to $205 CAD) | $140 to $250 CAD (with international courier) |
| United States (FBI) | Approx. USD 18 (~$25 CAD) | $100 to $150 CAD (fingerprinting + courier) |
| Philippines (NBI) | Approx. $40 | $120 to $160 (fingerprinting and courier) |
Police certificates are generally valid for one year from the date of issue. If your application processing runs longer than one year, IRCC may ask for an updated certificate. You will pay again. For applicants from Pakistan or certain other countries where IRCC processing times are above average, factor in the real possibility of needing a second certificate.
Certified Translations: $25 to $28 Per Page
Any document not in English or French must be accompanied by a certified translation and a certified copy of the original. This applies to birth certificates, marriage certificates, national ID cards, police certificates, and any other official document issued in another language.
Standard rate is $25 to $28 per page for straightforward documents. Complex legal documents like divorce decrees or custody orders may be priced per word at $0.10 to $0.50, which adds up fast for multi-page documents.
A typical application from a country like Pakistan, India, or the Philippines involving five to eight documents that need translation will cost $150 to $250 in certified translation fees alone.
Other Universal Costs
- Passport photos: $15 to $22 for IRCC-compliant photos (50mm x 70mm). Every family member needs photos.
- Printing and certified copies: $30 to $80 for high-quality printing and certified copies of key documents.
- Courier services: $20 to $60 for tracked domestic or international courier if sending physical documents.
Should You Hire an Immigration Consultant or Lawyer for Spousal Sponsorship?
Let me be direct with you. No one is required to hire a representative. Many couples complete spousal sponsorship applications on their own and get approved.
But here is the stat that should make you think twice before going it alone: 27% of inland spousal sponsorship applications submitted in 2025 were returned as incomplete before IRCC even reviewed the relationship evidence. That is more than one in four applications failing at the first check. A returned application means months of delay and non-refundable fees already paid.
A professional cannot guarantee approval. But a good one reduces the chance of a return or refusal caused by paperwork errors, missing documents, or weak relationship evidence.
RCIC Fees: $3,000 to $5,000
Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultants (RCICs) are licensed by the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC). For standard spousal sponsorship files, RCICs typically charge $3,000 to $5,000 in professional fees.
Some RCICs offer a review-only service where you prepare the full application yourself and a licensed consultant audits it for errors before submission. This costs $550 to $850 and is a strong middle-ground option for confident applicants who want a professional safety net.
Immigration Lawyer Fees: $3,500 to $7,000+
Immigration lawyers can represent you in Federal Court if your application is refused. This makes them the right choice for complex cases that might result in litigation. Standard spousal sponsorship ranges from $3,500 to $7,000. Complex cases with prior refusals or criminal inadmissibility can run $6,000 to $10,000 or more.
When Professional Help Pays for Itself
- Your relationship has features IRCC scrutinizes closely: large age gap, short dating period before marriage, online-only relationship history, or significant financial disparity
- Either partner has a criminal record, previous visa refusals, or past immigration violations
- Your partner has medical conditions that may trigger additional admissibility review
- Complex family situations: children from previous relationships, custody arrangements, or prior sponsorships
- You have already been refused once and want to understand why before reapplying
For straightforward cases, DIY is completely viable. Read the IRCC instruction guides carefully, organize your relationship evidence thoroughly, and answer every question accurately and consistently. Inconsistency between forms is one of the top reasons officers request further evidence or refuse applications.
What Does Spousal Sponsorship Actually Cost? Three Real Scenarios
Canadian citizen in Ontario sponsoring spouse from Pakistan. No children. No prior refusals. Applying DIY.
Cost Breakdown
Canadian PR in British Columbia sponsoring spouse and one child (age 6) from India. Hires an RCIC for confidence and accuracy.
Cost Breakdown
Canadian citizen in Ontario sponsoring spouse from the UK. Prior visitor visa refusal on record. Hires a lawyer given refusal history.
Cost Breakdown
Which Spousal Sponsorship Fees Are Refundable in Canada?
Refundable Fees
- Right of Permanent Residence Fee ($575): refunded if refused or withdrawn before visa issuance
- Quebec MIFI undertaking fees: refunded if application returned during the intake cap
Non-Refundable Fees
- Sponsorship application fee ($85)
- Principal applicant processing fee ($545)
- Biometrics fee ($85)
- Immigration medical exam costs
- Police certificate fees
- Certified translation fees
- Professional fees (once work has begun)
The refund process for the RPRF takes up to eight weeks. You must withdraw your application in writing and submit a refund request form through your IRCC secure account or by contacting IRCC directly. Keep records of all payment confirmation emails in case you need to follow up.
This is why submitting a complete and well-prepared application matters so much. Once you submit and IRCC opens your file, $715 in non-refundable fees is already spent. A returned application because of missing documents does not recover those fees. You start over and pay again.
Frequently Asked Questions About the Cost of Sponsoring a Spouse to Canada
Can I pay the IRCC spousal sponsorship fees in instalments?
Is there a minimum income requirement to sponsor a spouse in Canada?
Do biometrics need to be paid again if my spouse provided them before?
What happens to the fees I already paid if my application is returned incomplete?
Do I need certified translations if my spouse speaks fluent English?
How long are immigration medical exam results valid for spousal sponsorship?
Learn more about the full spousal sponsorship process in our guide to Canadian Spousal Sponsorship and the current inland vs outland sponsorship comparison for 2026.
Know Your Costs. Build Your Strategy.
Every family’s situation is different. Before you spend a dollar, know exactly what your case requires. Amir Ismail (RCIC #R412319) has helped more than 25,000 families navigate Canadian immigration since 1991. Offices in Toronto, Dubai, and Karachi.
Book Your Spousal Sponsorship Strategy AssessmentPartner with Amir Ismail & Associates
Navigating Canadian immigration and licensing can be complex. Amir Ismail & Associates offers expert guidance and personalized support to transform your aspiration into reality.
Tailored Immigration Strategies
Express Entry optimization, PNP navigation, documentation excellence.
Licensing & Settlement Support
Guidance on credential recognition, connections to resources, pre-arrival planning.
With over 30 years of experience and a proven track record, we are committed to helping you achieve your Canadian dream.
Amir Ismail, RCIC # R412319
Read More Spousal Sponsorship Resources
Sponsoring a New Spouse After Divorce in Canada: The 2026 Rules Explained
Cost to Sponsor a Spouse to Canada 2026: Full Breakdown
Inland vs Outland Canadian Spousal Sponsorship 2026
Spousal Sponsorship Evidence: The 4-Pillar Framework (2026)
Why Spousal Sponsorship Applications Get Returned Before Anyone Reads Them | Amir Ismail
Why Spousal Sponsorship Applications Get Returned Before Anyone Reads Them | Amir Ismail Why Your…
Canada Spousal Sponsorship Red Flags: 11 Reasons IRCC Refuses Applications
Canada Spousal Sponsorship Red Flags: 11 Reasons IRCC Refuses Applications 🟢 Updated March 15, 2026…

