PRRA Eligibility: Who Can Apply for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment in Canada?

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At Kingwell Immigration Law, we have helped clients fight PRRA refusals at the Federal Court of Canada — and the answer to who can apply depends on your immigration history, the type of removal order you face, and whether a 12-month waiting period applies to your situation.

 

A Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) is Canada’s last formal protection mechanism before a person is deported, and not everyone facing removal qualifies.

 

If you are facing removal from Canada, speak with our deportation lawyer in Canada about your PRRA options.

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Table of Contents

What Is a PRRA and What Does It Protect Against?

A Pre-Removal Risk Assessment is a written application reviewed by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) that asks a single question: Would removing you from Canada put you at serious risk?

 

Under sections 112 to 115 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA), IRCC officers assess whether your removal would expose you to:

 

  • Persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group
  • Torture as defined under the Convention Against Torture
  • A risk to your life or a risk of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment
  • Danger of torture, in cases involving serious criminality or security grounds (restricted PRRA only)

 

A PRRA is not the same as a refugee claim. A refugee claim is heard by the independent Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB). A PRRA is assessed by an IRCC officer on written submissions alone, with no in-person hearing unless credibility is a central issue and oral testimony is required under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations.

 

For many people facing removal, it is the last legal safeguard available in Canada — and we are here to help you use it effectively.

Who Is Eligible to Apply for a PRRA?

Not everyone facing removal is eligible to apply. Eligibility is determined by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) when the removal process begins. You can only apply if CBSA notifies you that you are eligible and provides you with a PRRA application package — you cannot self-refer.

You may be eligible if you fall into one of these categories:

  • Failed refugee claimants: The Refugee Protection Division (RPD) rejected your claim, the Refugee Appeal Division (RAD) upheld the rejection (or you had no right of appeal), and you now face removal.
  • People under removal orders with no prior refugee claim: You are subject to removal due to overstaying a visa, inadmissibility, or other grounds, and you have never sought protection through the IRB.
  • Applicants whose refugee claim was found ineligible: Your claim was not referred to the IRB — for example, because it was deemed ineligible under the IRPA — and you have now been served with a PRRA notification.
  • People subject to a certificate under section 77(1) of the IRPA: You have been named in a security certificate and are subject to a removal order.

Who Is Not Eligible

Some people facing removal are not eligible for a PRRA, or face significant restrictions on what can be assessed:

 

  • Recognized Convention refugees: If Canada has already granted you refugee protection, you cannot apply for a PRRA.
  • Those inadmissible for serious criminality or security grounds: If your removal order is based on serious criminality, organized criminality, human or international rights violations, or security concerns, you may only qualify for a restricted PRRA, with a narrower set of grounds available to you.
  • Persons subject to extradition proceedings: If an authority to proceed under the Extradition Act has been issued, you are barred from applying.

 

If you are unsure which category applies to your situation, our lawyers can assess your eligibility and advise you on the options available before your removal date.

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The 12-Month Bar: When You Must Wait Before Applying

In most cases, if you have previously had a refugee claim or PRRA application refused, abandoned, or withdrawn, you must wait 12 months before becoming eligible to apply again. Under section 112(2)(b.1) of the IRPA, the 12-month bar is triggered by:

 

  • An RPD or RAD rejection of your refugee claim
  • A Federal Court refusal of leave to seek judicial review of your refugee claim or a previous PRRA decision
  • A previous PRRA refusal by IRCC
  • Abandoning or withdrawing your refugee claim or PRRA application

 

The 12-month period runs from whichever of these events occurred most recently. If you pursued multiple steps — for example, an RPD rejection followed by a RAD appeal and then a Federal Court application — the bar runs from the final negative outcome, not the first. For applicants from designated countries of origin, the waiting period is extended to 36 months under the same provision.

Exemptions to the 12-Month Bar

IRCC may waive the 12-month bar for nationals of specific countries where conditions have deteriorated rapidly. As of early 2026, IRCC maintains a list of country-based exemptions to the 12-month bar for nationals of certain countries — for example, Iran, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Venezuela — each tied to specific decision date windows. These exemptions change over time, and the official IRCC eligibility page maintains the current list.

 

If you received a negative decision and are unsure whether an exemption applies to your country, we can review your timeline and confirm whether you are currently eligible to apply.

What Has Changed Under Bill C-12?

The PRRA landscape has shifted significantly since 2025. Bill C-12 — the Strengthening Canada’s Immigration System and Borders Act — received Royal Assent on March 26, 2026, and introduced two rules that now direct a large group of asylum seekers away from the IRB and into the PRRA process instead.

 

  • The one-year rule: If you entered Canada after June 24, 2020, and filed your asylum claim more than one year after your first entry, your claim will not be referred to the IRB. A PRRA will be your first and only protection assessment.
  • The 14-day rule: If you entered Canada between ports of entry along the Canada–U.S. land border and waited more than 14 days to file your claim, your claim will also not be referred to the IRB.

 

IRCC has estimated that approximately 37% of asylum claims filed between June and October 2025 — roughly 19,000 applications — fall under these rules. For people in this category, the PRRA is no longer a fallback option; it is the primary mechanism for seeking protection in Canada.

Claimants diverted to PRRA under Bill C-12 are also not subject to the new evidence restriction — they can submit a full evidentiary record from the outset.

 

If you are affected by the Bill C-12 changes and are unsure of your pathway, our lawyers can assess your situation and help you build the strongest possible submission.

Unrestricted vs. Restricted PRRA: What's the Difference?

Not all PRRA applicants are assessed on the same grounds. The type of PRRA you receive depends on your removal history and the nature of the inadmissibility finding against you.

 

PRRA TypeWho It Applies ToRisk Grounds Assessed
Unrestricted PRRAFailed refugee claimants; people under removal without a prior refugee claimPersecution (s. 96 IRPA), torture, risk to life, cruel and unusual treatment (s. 97 IRPA)
Restricted PRRAPersons inadmissible for serious criminality, organized criminality, security, or human and international rights violationsTorture only (s. 97(1)(a) IRPA)


 For restricted applicants, the threshold is higher, and the grounds are narrower. We can advise you on what arguments are available within those limits and how to structure your submission accordingly.

The New Evidence Rule for Failed Refugee Claimants

If you previously had a refugee claim refused, there is a significant restriction on what evidence you can submit in your PRRA. Under section 113(a) of the IRPA, failed refugee claimants can only present evidence that:

 

  • Arose after the rejection of their refugee claim, or
  • Was not reasonably available at the time of the refugee hearing, or
  • Could not reasonably have been expected to have been presented at the hearing

 

This rule exists because the PRRA is not designed to be a second refugee hearing — its purpose is to capture new risks that did not exist, or were not known, at the time of the original decision. In practice, the question of what qualifies as genuinely “new” evidence has been debated at the Federal Court for years.

One of the most common reasons PRRA applications are refused is an officer’s failure to properly consider the evidence submitted

 

📌 In O.J. v Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (2019 FC 684), we successfully appealed a PRRA refusal to the Federal Court after the officer failed to consider important evidence of threats our client faced from her husband in Nigeria — and failed to hold a mandatory PRRA interview. The Court overturned the decision and sent the application back for review.

 

📌 In A.M. v Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (2019 FC 270), the Federal Court agreed with our position that the officer had improperly rejected new evidence of the ongoing danger our client faced in Iran, and ordered the PRRA reconsidered.

 

Screening your evidence carefully before submission — and identifying what qualifies as “new” — is one of the most valuable ways we can support you in preparing your PRRA.

To discuss your evidence and submission strategy, book a consultation at Kingwell Immigration Law.

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How the PRRA Process Works: From Notification to Decision

When CBSA determines you are removal-ready and eligible for a PRRA, you will receive a notification package containing Form IMM 5508 (Application for a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment) and Guide 5523. The deadlines that follow are strict. For a full overview of what the PRRA application involves, visit our dedicated service page.

 

  1. Receive the PRRA notification. CBSA will inform you in writing that you are eligible. The clock starts from the date you receive the package.
  2. Submit the application form. You must submit the completed IMM 5508 within 15 days of receiving the notification in person, or 22 days if received by mail. Missing this deadline means losing the automatic stay of removal.
  3. Submit written submissions and supporting evidence. After filing the form, you have a further 15 days to submit your written risk narrative and supporting documents — no later than 30 days after receiving the package.
  4. IRCC officer review. A protection officer reviews your file. This officer must be different from any officer who previously assessed your refugee claim. The decision is made on the written record alone in most cases.
  5. Oral hearing (rare). A hearing may be held if credibility is a central issue, the concern genuinely relates to a PRRA ground, and oral testimony is required to resolve it under Regulation 167 of the IRPR. Most applicants will not receive a hearing.
  6. Decision. If approved, you become a protected person and may apply for permanent residence. If refused, removal proceedings resume — though further legal options may still be available.

 

Applications may be submitted online through Canada Post’s Connect service, which allows IRCC to register the stay of removal faster than paper submissions. Given how tight these timelines are, having a lawyer involved from the moment you receive the notification can make a significant difference.

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What Makes a Strong PRRA Submission?

Because most PRRA decisions are made entirely on the written record, the quality of your submission is the single most important factor in the outcome. Evidence that carries significant weight includes:

 

  • A detailed personal risk narrative that identifies the specific threat, who poses it, why relocation within the country is not a safe option, and why your situation is distinct from the general risk facing the population
  • Country condition documentation from authoritative sources such as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and U.S. State Department human rights reports
  • Affidavits from witnesses, family members, or others who can corroborate your account of the risk
  • Medical or psychological reports documenting trauma or conditions directly connected to the harm you fear
  • News articles, government publications, or research documents tied specifically to your personal circumstances and the current situation in your country

The Role of Procedural Fairness

PRRA officers are bound by the rules of procedural fairness. In Yasmin v Minister of Citizenship and Immigration (2018 FC 265), we appealed successfully to the Federal Court on the basis that IRCC had failed to provide our client with evidence of a fingerprint match before refusing her application — a clear breach of procedural fairness.

 

The Court agreed and ordered her application reconsidered. The same principle applies in PRRA cases: if an officer relies on country condition documents they did not disclose to you, or raises credibility concerns without giving you an opportunity to respond, those failures can form the basis of a successful judicial review.

Building a submission that is both thorough and strategically sound — and identifying procedural errors if a refusal follows — is precisely where our lawyers can make a difference to your outcome.

 

💡 Additional reading: PRRA approval rate

What Happens After a PRRA Decision?

If your PRRA is approved, you become a protected person under the IRPA. You may apply for permanent residence in Canada — with one notable exception. If your removal order was based on serious criminality, you may be recognized as a protected person but remain ineligible for permanent residence.

 

If your PRRA is refused, your removal order becomes enforceable again. Options that may remain available include:

 

  • Judicial review at the Federal Court. You can apply to the Federal Court to review the officer’s decision on the grounds that it was unreasonable or procedurally unfair. Filing for judicial review does not stop removal automatically — a separate motion for a stay must be brought on an urgent basis, satisfying the three-part test: a serious question to be tried, irreparable harm if removed, and the balance of convenience favouring a stay.
  • Humanitarian and Compassionate (H&C) consideration. Depending on your circumstances and timing, an application under section 25 of the IRPA may still be available.
  • Motion for stay of removal. If removal is imminent, this motion can be brought in parallel with judicial review to pause enforcement while the Federal Court considers your case.

 

It is also important to note that only a lawyer — not a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) — can represent you before the Federal Court. If your PRRA has been refused, we can assess whether judicial review is viable and move quickly to protect your right to remain in Canada.

How Kingwell Immigration Law Can Help With Your PRRA

When removal is approaching, and a PRRA is your last line of protection, the written submission you put before the officer — and the legal strategy behind it — can determine what happens next.

At Kingwell Immigration Law, our lawyers bring over 20 years of Canadian immigration experience to every PRRA file. We have taken PRRA decisions to the Federal Court and won, identifying the errors that officers make and building the arguments that courts have accepted.

Whether you have just received a PRRA notification, are concerned about the 12-month bar, have received a refusal, or are facing imminent removal, we can assess your situation and take action on your behalf.

 

Call us at 416.988.8853 or book a consultation to speak with a lawyer today.

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FAQs

I overstayed my visa and have never made a refugee claim in Canada — am I eligible for a PRRA?

Yes. If you have never sought refugee protection through the IRB and are facing removal for overstaying your visa or another non-criminal ground, you may be eligible for a PRRA once CBSA notifies you. Because you have no prior refused refugee claim, you are not subject to the new evidence restriction.

Filing a complete PRRA application on time triggers an automatic stay of removal in most cases — but only if you submit Form IMM 5508 by the deadline in your CBSA notification. Missing that deadline eliminates the automatic stay, and filing for judicial review alone does not pause removal.

Yes. Dependent family members who are in Canada and named in your PRRA notification may be included, but each person’s individual risk must be addressed in the submission. Risks that are distinct from yours should be presented separately with supporting evidence.

No. Documents in a language other than English or French must be accompanied by a certified translation before submission, or they risk being disregarded entirely. The translation must include a signed declaration from the translator confirming their competency and the accuracy of the translation.

Under section 72 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, you have 15 days from receiving the decision to file for leave and judicial review if you are in Canada — one of the shortest limitation periods in Canadian immigration law. Our lawyers can assess viability and file urgently to preserve your right to remain.