trv canada

The temporary resident visa (TRV), commonly called the visitor visa, is the document Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) issues to travelers from non-visa-exempt countries who want to enter Canada for tourism, family visits, business meetings, or short-term study and work tied to another permit. Knowing how to apply for a temporary resident visa correctly is the difference between a 17-day approval and a six-month wait, and it starts with one decision: do you actually need a TRV, or do you need an electronic Travel Authorization (eTA)?

This guide walks through the eligibility test, the documents IRCC asks for, the CAD$100 fee plus CAD$85 biometrics, the current 2026 processing times by country, and the step-by-step IRCC online application. It is built on the IRCC processing data released April 29, 2026, and reflects the rules in force as of May 2026.

Key Takeaways

  • A temporary resident visa for Canada costs CAD$100 per person, plus CAD$85 for biometrics (CAD$170 for a family of two or more applying together).
  • IRCC’s April 29, 2026 processing data shows visitor visa wait times of 11 days from inside Canada, 17 days from the Philippines, 22 days from the United States, 27 days from India, 45 days from Nigeria, and 48 days from Pakistan.
  • Most TRVs are issued as multiple-entry visas, valid for up to ten years or until the passport expires, with each visit lasting up to six months.
  • Citizens of visa-exempt countries do not need a TRV. They apply for an eTA instead at CAD$7 per person, approved within minutes for air travel only.
  • The application is filed online through the IRCC Secure Account using form IMM 5257 (Application for Visitor Visa). Paper filing is permitted only for documented disability cases.
  • Biometrics (fingerprints and a photo) are valid for ten years and apply across all temporary residence categories. Processing time only starts counting after biometrics are submitted.

What Is a Temporary Resident Visa for Canada?

A temporary resident visa is a sticker placed in your passport by a Canadian visa office that authorizes you to ask a Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officer for entry to Canada at the airport or land border. The visa itself is not a guarantee of entry; the CBSA officer makes the final call when you arrive. In immigration shorthand, “TRV” and “visitor visa” mean the same document.

Three categories of visitor use the TRV:

  • Tourists, including parents and grandparents on shorter trips that do not justify a Super Visa.
  • Family visitors attending weddings, funerals, births, or extended stays of up to six months.
  • Short-term business travellers, conference delegates, and people transiting through a Canadian airport with a layover longer than the visa-exempt window.

A TRV is also issued alongside a study permit or work permit when the holder is from a non-visa-exempt country. In those cases the study or work permit authorizes the activity in Canada, and the TRV authorizes the entry. They are issued together, in the same package, after the principal permit is approved.

Do You Need a TRV or an eTA? The 60-Second Test

Before you start the IRCC application, settle the TRV-versus-eTA question. The answer depends on your citizenship, not your country of residence.

Your statusWhat you need to enter Canada
Citizen of a visa-required country (India, Philippines, China, Pakistan, Nigeria, Vietnam, etc.)Temporary Resident Visa (TRV), CAD$100 plus biometrics
Citizen of a visa-exempt country (UK, France, Germany, Japan, Australia, etc.) flying to CanadaElectronic Travel Authorization (eTA), CAD$7, approved in minutes
Citizen of a visa-exempt country entering Canada by car, bus, train, or ferryNothing. Carry your passport and answer the CBSA officer’s questions at the border
United States citizenNothing. US citizens are exempt from both TRV and eTA, by air or by land
US lawful permanent resident (green card holder)Green card and a valid passport from your home country. No TRV or eTA
Canadian citizen or permanent residentCanadian passport (citizens) or PR card and home-country passport (PRs). No visitor visa

If your passport is from a visa-required country, the rest of this guide is for you. If you are unsure, run your country and travel mode through IRCC’s “Find out if you need a visa” tool on canada.ca before paying any fee. Travellers occasionally pay for a TRV they do not need, or pay for an eTA when they actually need a TRV. IRCC does not refund the application fee for the wrong document.

TRV Eligibility: What IRCC Verifies in Every File

Five conditions sit behind every approved temporary resident visa. An officer reading your file is checking each one:

  1. A valid passport with at least one blank visa page and a validity date that covers the full intended stay (most officers want six months past the planned departure, though this is not a hard rule for TRVs).
  2. Proof you will leave Canada at the end of your visit. This is the “ties to home country” test. Officers look for steady employment, owned or rented property, family in your home country, and a credible travel history.
  3. Sufficient funds for the trip. No fixed dollar figure, but the standard benchmark is roughly CAD$200 per day of stay, plus return airfare. A two-week visit by an average traveller works out to roughly CAD$3,000 to CAD$5,000 in available funds.
  4. No criminal record or security inadmissibility. Officers run background checks against Canadian, US, and Interpol records. A past criminal record can be overcome through a temporary resident permit or rehabilitation, but not silently.
  5. Good health. A medical exam is required if you have lived for six consecutive months in a country IRCC lists as “designated” (high tuberculosis incidence) within the year before applying, or if you intend to work in a job that brings you into close contact with the public (healthcare, daycare, primary or secondary education).

The officer pieces these five threads into a single yes/no decision. Strong files address each thread head-on rather than hoping the officer fills in the gaps.

How to Apply for a Temporary Resident Visa: Step-by-Step Online Process

The IRCC online application has been the default since 2018, and as of 2026 it is the only accepted route for most applicants. Paper applications are reserved for travellers with a documented disability that prevents online filing. The full sequence breaks down into nine steps.

Step 1: Confirm Eligibility on canada.ca

Use the IRCC “Come to Canada” tool to confirm you need a TRV (not an eTA), confirm you are eligible to apply, and generate a personalized document checklist. The tool asks about citizenship, purpose of visit, and family ties in Canada. The checklist it generates is the file IRCC will reference when reviewing your application, so save the reference code (it begins with “RC-“) and use it when you upload documents.

Step 2: Create Your IRCC Secure Account

You apply through the IRCC Secure Account, the same portal used for study and work permits. New applicants register with a GCKey or a sign-in partner (a participating Canadian bank login). The account stores your application status, messages from IRCC, and any document requests. You will use this account for the entire visa life cycle, so use an email address you check daily.

Step 3: Complete Form IMM 5257 (Application for Visitor Visa)

Form IMM 5257 is the core application. It is a fillable PDF you download, complete on your computer (handwriting is not accepted), validate using the form’s barcode generator, and upload back to your Secure Account. The form asks for personal details, passport information, travel history for the last ten years, addresses for the last ten years, employment for the last ten years, and family information.

A few common form mistakes that delay processing:

  • Leaving fields blank when “N/A” or “0” is the correct entry. Blank fields trigger a return for completeness.
  • Listing a prior name (maiden name, religious name) only in the application but not in the passport, or vice versa, without an explanatory note.
  • Inconsistent dates between the form and supporting documents. Officers cross-check everything.

Save the validated PDF. The barcode at the bottom is what IRCC’s system reads.

Step 4: Gather Supporting Documents

Each applicant uploads the documents on the IRCC checklist. The standard TRV file includes:

  • Passport biographical page, valid for the full intended stay.
  • Two passport-style photographs meeting IRCC’s photo specifications (35mm by 45mm, neutral expression, plain background, taken within six months).
  • Form IMM 5645 (Family Information). Required for every TRV applicant.
  • Form IMM 5409 (Statutory Declaration of Common-Law Union), if applicable.
  • Form IMM 5476 (Use of a Representative), if a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant or lawyer is filing on your behalf.
  • Proof of financial means: recent bank statements (last four to six months), employment letter on company letterhead, recent pay stubs, tax returns from the last two years, or proof of liquid assets.
  • Letter of invitation from your host in Canada (when applicable). Not strictly required, but it helps. If your host is a parent, partner, or close relative, a signed letter that names the host’s address, occupation, income, and the planned dates of your visit strengthens the file.
  • Proof of ties to home country: employment letter showing approved leave dates, property documents, business ownership documents, school enrolment for children, or evidence of dependants.
  • Travel itinerary if booked, or a written purpose-of-trip statement covering planned dates, accommodation, and activities. Do not book non-refundable flights before the visa is approved.
  • Travel history: copies of all visa pages from previous passports, especially Schengen, US, UK, Australian, or prior Canadian visas. Strong travel history is the single most useful supporting document.
  • Police certificate, if requested (rare for TRVs, more common where the applicant has lived in multiple countries).
  • Medical exam confirmation, if required.

Step 5: Pay the Fees Online

Two fees are mandatory for nearly every TRV applicant:

  • Visitor visa application fee: CAD$100 per person.
  • Biometrics fee: CAD$85 per person, or CAD$170 maximum for a family of two or more applying together, or CAD$255 maximum for a group of three or more performers and their staff.

A family applying together (parents and minor children, for example) saves on biometrics by submitting at the same time and paying the family rate. Pay through the IRCC online payment system at the end of the application. Save the receipt; you will upload it back into the Secure Account, and you will need it at the Visa Application Centre.

Step 6: Submit the Application

Submit the validated IMM 5257, IMM 5645, the supporting documents, the photo, and the proof of payment through the Secure Account. The system gives you a confirmation page; download it. Submission is electronic, so there is no mailing step.

Step 7: Provide Biometrics

Within a few days of submission, IRCC sends a Biometrics Instruction Letter (BIL) to your Secure Account inbox. The letter directs you to a Visa Application Centre (VAC), the network of in-person service centres that collect fingerprints and photos for IRCC. Most countries have at least one VAC; major sending countries have several. The VAC charges a separate service fee on top of the CAD$85 biometrics fee, typically CAD$10 to CAD$50 depending on the location.

Schedule the biometrics appointment within 30 days of receiving the BIL. Bring a printed copy of the letter, your passport, and the appointment confirmation. The appointment itself takes ten to fifteen minutes. Biometrics are valid for ten years, so if you have given them on a Canadian visa application within the last decade, you may be able to skip this step. The BIL will tell you.

Processing time only begins counting after IRCC receives confirmation from the VAC that biometrics are complete. This catches most first-time applicants by surprise. The visa officer cannot start work until biometrics are uploaded into the system.

Step 8: Wait for the Decision

Processing times vary widely by country. IRCC publishes a live tracker on canada.ca, updated weekly. The numbers below are the published processing times as of April 29, 2026, and reflect 80% of cases for each office.

Country of applicationVisitor visa processing time (April 29, 2026)
Inside Canada11 days
Philippines17 days
United States22 days
India27 days
Chinaapproximately 50 days
Mexicoapproximately 18 days
Nigeria45 days
Pakistan48 days
United Kingdom (visa-required cases)approximately 31 days
United Arab Emirates80 to 320 days, country-specific backlog

Expect an additional one to three weeks beyond IRCC’s quoted figure for the time it takes to give biometrics, ship your passport to the visa office for stamping, and receive it back. The CIC News data release of April 29, 2026 also flagged a steep drop in Indian visitor visa times, from 78 days in February 2026 to 27 days in April 2026.

If the visa office requests additional documents, your processing clock pauses until you respond. Respond within the deadline given in the request letter (usually seven to thirty days).

Step 9: Send the Passport for Stamping and Travel

If approved, IRCC issues two documents: a Letter of Introduction (LOI) confirming the approval, and instructions to mail your passport to the issuing visa office or VAC for the visa sticker. The visa sticker is then placed inside your passport and the passport is mailed back to you.

Do not book non-refundable travel until the passport is back in your hands with the visa sticker. The LOI alone is not a travel document. At the Canadian airport or border, present the passport with the visa sticker, a copy of the LOI, proof of funds, and (if applicable) the host’s invitation letter. The CBSA officer checks the documents, asks a few questions about the purpose of the visit, and admits you for up to six months.

For a deeper view of every IRCC fee a visitor or future immigrant might encounter, see our Canada immigration cost guide.

trv application

Canada TRV Processing Time: What 2026 Actually Looks Like

Headline processing time figures hide three realities that catch applicants off-guard.

Reality 1: Biometrics gate the clock. IRCC quotes processing time from the day biometrics are received, not from the day you submit the application. Late biometrics push your effective wait by one to three weeks.

Reality 2: Inside-Canada visitor visa renewals run faster than fresh applications from abroad. As of April 29, 2026, in-Canada visitor visa processing sits at 11 days, while a fresh application from the United States runs 22 days and from India runs 27 days. Travellers already in Canada on a TRV who want to extend or amend may benefit from filing inside Canada (though that is technically a visitor record application, not a new TRV).

Reality 3: Direction of travel for processing times can change in weeks. The April 29, 2026 IRCC data showed Pakistan and Nigeria with the most notable improvements that two-week period, and India falling from 78 days in February to 27 days in April. A processing time you read in February is not the same number in May. Always verify against the live IRCC tool before you bank a travel date.

For applicants looking at the broader temporary residence category, our study permit in Canada guide explains how the same Secure Account and biometrics handle the parallel student application.

Multiple-Entry vs. Single-Entry Visas

Most TRVs issued today are multiple-entry, but the visa officer makes the call based on your file. The two formats differ in important ways.

FeatureMultiple-entry TRVSingle-entry TRV
Number of entries during validityUnlimitedOne only
Validity periodUp to 10 years, or until passport expiresUp to 6 months from issue
CostCAD$100 (same)CAD$100 (same)
Typical use caseStandard issue for tourism and family visitsSpecific purpose: a wedding, a one-time event, or where the officer has concerns
Re-entry after a US tripYes, within validityNo, would need a new TRV

You do not pick the format. IRCC officers default to multiple-entry but downgrade to single-entry when the file shows weaker ties, a one-time purpose, or unresolved concerns. A multi-entry visa is the right outcome for almost every visitor; if you receive a single-entry, plan your trip accordingly.

Common Reasons TRV Applications Are Refused

Refusal rates for visitor visas vary by country, but the reasons are remarkably consistent. The recurring patterns:

  • Insufficient ties to home country. The number-one refusal reason. The officer is not satisfied you will leave Canada at the end of the visit. Single applicants without dependants, recent unemployment, or weak property ties are the most common profile.
  • Travel history concerns. No prior travel history is a yellow flag. A prior overstay, refused visa, or removal order is a red flag and must be addressed openly.
  • Purpose of trip not credible. A vague itinerary, an invitation letter that does not match the relationship, or contradictions between the form and the supporting documents trigger refusal.
  • Insufficient funds. Bank statements that show a sudden deposit just before applying are flagged. Officers want to see steady balances over the last four to six months.
  • Misrepresentation. Any inconsistency between the application, supporting documents, and the applicant’s records is treated as misrepresentation and carries a five-year ban from re-applying.
  • Inadmissibility. Criminal record, security concerns, medical inadmissibility, or a previous immigration violation. These can sometimes be overcome through a temporary resident permit; they cannot be hidden.

If your application is refused, request the GCMS notes through an Access to Information and Privacy (ATIP) request. The notes explain the officer’s reasoning and form the foundation for a stronger second application or, in narrow cases, a Federal Court judicial review. For complex refusals, work with a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant; our verify your immigration consultant guide explains how to confirm a representative’s CICC license before signing a retainer.

TRV Costs in 2026

Cost itemAmount (CAD)Notes
Visitor visa application fee$100Per applicant, paid online to IRCC
Biometrics (single applicant)$85Per person
Biometrics (family of two or more)$170Maximum, applied together
Biometrics (group of three or more performers)$255Maximum
Visa Application Centre service fee$10 to $50Varies by VAC location
Passport-style photos$20 to $40Per applicant
Medical exam (if required)$200 to $450Plus specialist follow-ups, if requested
Police certificate (if required)$0 to $100Varies by issuing country
eTA (visa-exempt countries only, not for TRV holders)$7Five-year validity
Visitor record (extension from inside Canada)$100Per person, extends an existing TRV

A single applicant filing a clean TRV without a medical exam typically pays CAD$200 to CAD$300 all-in, plus passport photos and the VAC service fee. A family of three pays roughly CAD$470 in IRCC fees plus VAC service charges.

Renewing or Extending a TRV

A TRV is renewed in two ways depending on where you are.

From Inside Canada: Apply for a Visitor Record

If you are already in Canada and want to stay longer than your authorized stay (the date stamped or marked in your passport at entry), apply for a visitor record using form IMM 5708. A visitor record is not a new visa; it is permission to remain in Canada past your original stay. The fee is CAD$100, the application is filed online through the Secure Account, and you should submit it at least 30 days before your authorized stay expires. If you submit before expiry, you have implied status and may legally remain in Canada while IRCC reviews the file.

Inside-Canada visitor visa-related applications were processing in 11 days as of April 29, 2026, but visitor record extensions specifically were running over 300 days. Apply early.

From Outside Canada: Apply for a New TRV

A TRV stamped in an expired passport does not transfer automatically to a new passport. Apply for a fresh TRV from outside Canada with the full package: IMM 5257, IMM 5645, supporting documents, fees, and biometrics (if your last biometrics were more than ten years ago).

If your TRV is still valid but your passport expired, you can carry both passports together at the border; CBSA accepts the combination as long as the visa is within validity. This is a workaround, not a permanent solution.

Working or Studying in Canada on a TRV

A TRV is a visitor document. It does not authorize work or full-time study.

  • Work: A TRV holder cannot accept paid employment from a Canadian employer, freelance for Canadian clients paid into a Canadian bank account, or run a Canadian business. Working without authorization is grounds for removal and a future inadmissibility finding. Visitors who want to work need a separate work permit; some categories allow online application from inside Canada with an employer’s Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA), but the work cannot start until the permit is issued. Our guide on getting a job offer from Canada walks through what employers and applicants need to line up.
  • Short-term study: A TRV holder may take a course of study lasting six months or less, provided the course completes within the authorized period of stay. Programs longer than six months require a study permit, applied for separately. A study permit application is a different application, not a TRV.
  • Volunteering: Unpaid volunteer work for a registered charity or community organization is permitted on a TRV. Be careful with arrangements that look like work in disguise (room and board in exchange for childcare, for example); CBSA officers can interpret those as unauthorized work.

If your visit is genuinely going to involve a job, a study program longer than six months, or a long-term family arrangement, a TRV is the wrong starting document. Apply for the right permit from the start, and IRCC issues the TRV alongside it (for travellers from non-visa-exempt countries) once the principal permit is approved.

Special Categories: Super Visa, eTA, and the Quebec Question

A regular TRV is the right document for most short visits. Two specific categories use different documents.

Super Visa. Parents and grandparents of Canadian citizens or permanent residents who want to stay for more than six months at a time can apply for a Super Visa, a multi-entry visa that allows stays of up to five years per entry, extendable by two more years. The Super Visa requires private medical insurance with at least CAD$100,000 in coverage, an Immigration Medical Exam, and proof the host meets the Low Income Cut-Off (LICO). Our visitor visa for parents guide covers Super Visa rules in full.

eTA. Citizens of visa-exempt countries (UK, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, and most of Europe) flying to Canada need an eTA, not a TRV. The eTA costs CAD$7, is approved within minutes for most applicants, is valid for five years, and is linked to the passport. Land and sea entries from visa-exempt countries do not require either a TRV or an eTA. United States citizens are exempt from both, regardless of mode of entry.

Quebec. A TRV holder visiting Quebec uses the same federal visa; Quebec does not issue a separate visitor document. A traveller planning to study or work in Quebec for more than six months needs a Certificat d’acceptation du Québec (CAQ) in addition to the federal permit. The CAQ is not a visitor visa requirement and does not apply to short tourist trips.

Check Out How to Apply Temporary Resident Visa Canada (Tips and Documents):

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to get a temporary resident visa for Canada in 2026?

Processing time depends on the country of application and ranges from 11 days (inside Canada) to 80 days or more (United Arab Emirates). As of IRCC’s April 29, 2026 data, common offices are: Philippines 17 days, United States 22 days, India 27 days, Nigeria 45 days, Pakistan 48 days. Add one to three weeks for biometrics and passport mailing. Always verify against the live IRCC processing-time tool before you book travel.

How much does a Canadian TRV cost?

The IRCC application fee is CAD$100 per person. Biometrics add CAD$85 per person, or CAD$170 maximum for a family of two or more applying together. Add CAD$10 to CAD$50 for the Visa Application Centre service fee, CAD$20 to CAD$40 for passport photos, and CAD$200 to CAD$450 for a medical exam if one is required. A clean single-applicant file typically costs CAD$200 to CAD$300 in total.

Can I apply for a temporary resident visa from inside Canada?

Yes, in two narrow situations. First, if you are already in Canada on a valid temporary status and want to extend, you apply for a visitor record (not a new TRV) using IMM 5708. Second, if you have an approved permanent residence application and need to renew the TRV in your passport before travelling, you may apply from inside Canada. Otherwise, TRVs are applied for from outside Canada through the visa office responsible for your country of residence.

Do I need to give biometrics every time I apply for a Canadian visa?

No. Biometrics are valid for ten years. If you gave fingerprints and a photo on a previous Canadian visa, study permit, or work permit application within the last ten years, the system recognizes them and your application proceeds without a new appointment. The Biometrics Instruction Letter you receive after applying will tell you whether you need to attend a VAC.

What is the difference between a TRV and a study permit?

A TRV is a visitor document that authorizes entry to Canada for tourism, family visits, or short stays. A study permit authorizes a person to enrol in a Canadian school for a program longer than six months. Travellers from non-visa-exempt countries who hold a study permit also receive a TRV alongside it, in the same envelope from IRCC. The TRV authorizes the entry; the study permit authorizes the activity.

Can my visitor visa be denied even if I have travelled to Canada before?

Yes. Each TRV application is reviewed on its own merits, and the officer must be satisfied that you currently meet the eligibility criteria, especially the requirement to leave Canada at the end of the visit. A traveller whose ties to the home country have weakened (job change, separation, recent inheritance) can be refused even with a clean travel history. Lay out the current situation clearly in the application rather than relying on past approvals.

What happens if my passport expires while my TRV is still valid?

The TRV stays valid until the printed expiry date, but it is tied to the passport in which it was placed. When you renew your passport, do not throw the old one away. Carry both passports together at the border; CBSA accepts a valid TRV in an expired passport when paired with the new passport. When you next apply for a TRV (or when you next need to enter Canada and the old passport is unavailable), apply for a new TRV with the new passport.

Can a TRV holder apply for permanent residence from inside Canada?

A TRV does not give the holder a direct PR pathway, but holding a valid TRV does not prevent a separate PR application. Visitors with a Canadian spouse can apply for PR through Spousal Sponsorship from inside Canada. Visitors who become eligible for Express Entry (typically by securing a study or work permit and Canadian experience) apply through that program. The TRV itself is not a stepping stone, but it does not foreclose any future option. Our Express Entry walkthrough explains the federal PR pathway in detail.

Is the application fee refundable if my TRV is refused?

No. The CAD$100 application fee covers the processing of the file, not the outcome. A refused applicant who chooses to re-apply pays a new CAD$100 fee. Biometrics, however, are valid for ten years across applications, so a re-application within that window does not incur a new biometrics charge.

Can I expedite a TRV application?

IRCC does not offer a paid expedite for visitor visas. The published processing time for your country is the standard service. Travellers with urgent humanitarian reasons (a death in the family, urgent medical treatment in Canada, a critical court date) can file with a written request for urgent processing and supporting evidence. Approval is at the officer’s discretion and is not guaranteed.

What is the IRCC Letter of Introduction (LOI) for?

The LOI is the document IRCC issues when your TRV application is approved. It is not the visa itself. The visa is the sticker placed in your passport after you mail the passport to the issuing visa office. The LOI is what the CBSA officer reads at the airport to confirm your visa was issued through the correct channel, alongside the visa sticker in your passport. Carry both at the border.

Final Thoughts: Filing a TRV That Lands the Right Outcome

How to apply for a temporary resident visa is less about the form and more about the file. The IMM 5257 takes most applicants under an hour to fill in. The supporting documents, the proof of ties, the financial evidence, and the invitation letter are what an IRCC officer actually weighs when deciding the case. Build the file the way an officer reads it: who you are, what you do at home, why you are coming, why you will leave, who is paying for the trip, and what your travel history shows about your reliability as a visitor.

The 2026 processing times are the best they have been in two years for several major source countries. A clean file from the Philippines, the United States, or India is now in the 17-to-27-day range, down from 78 days for India just three months earlier. That speed is welcome but not guaranteed; the live IRCC tool is the single source of truth on the day you apply.

For visitors who later decide to stay longer or pursue permanent residence, the TRV is a clean starting point but not a pathway in itself. Our how to immigrate to Canada guide walks through the federal and provincial PR routes, and the Canada immigration cost breakdown shows the full picture of fees, settlement funds, and timelines for the journey from visitor to PR. This guide is informational and does not constitute legal advice; for refused applications, complex inadmissibility issues, or family situations involving custody, talk to a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant or a Canadian immigration lawyer before filing.