Humanitarian and compassionate applications are fact-specific. They are not a shortcut around other immigration programs. They are used where the applicant is asking IRCC to consider exceptional circumstances, hardship, establishment in Canada, family impact and other relevant humanitarian factors.
The file should explain the full picture
An H&C application is usually strongest when the evidence is organized around clear themes. Officers need to understand what has happened, what the person has built in Canada, what hardship may result if the request is refused, and how children or family members may be affected. The application should not rely only on emotion; it should connect the story to documents.
Evidence areas to think about
- Establishment in Canada, including work, school, community, language and family life.
- Hardship factors connected to leaving Canada or returning to another country.
- The best interests of any children affected by the decision.
- Medical, psychological, family or safety circumstances where relevant.
- Documents that explain credibility, timelines and consistency.
Why professional review matters
H&C files can become confusing when the evidence is submitted without structure. A licensed representative can help identify missing documents, weak explanations and areas where the application needs a clearer narrative. Abigail Sela is an RCIC-IRB consultant, which is especially relevant for complex files that may intersect with refugee, removal or admissibility concerns.
Official starting point: IRCC humanitarian and compassionate considerations.