Procedural Fairness Letter (PFL) response — Canada study permit
Reply to IRCC PFL listing the specific concerns and providing rebuttal evidence.
CanadaStudyPFLIRCCVavilov
IRCC issues a Procedural Fairness Letter (PFL) when the officer is inclined to refuse but is required under principles of procedural fairness (Baker v Canada [1999] 2 SCR 817; reinforced in Vavilov [2019] SCC 65) to disclose concerns and provide an opportunity to respond.
Draft a response to the PFL for [CLIENT_NAME] (UCI: [UCI], Application Number: [APPLICATION_NUMBER]).
OPENING
Letter format:
"To: Visa Officer, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada
Re: Procedural Fairness Letter dated [PFL_DATE] — Application Number [APPLICATION_NUMBER]
Date: [TODAY]"
§1 — ACKNOWLEDGEMENT (50-70 words)
"I write in response to the Procedural Fairness Letter dated [PFL_DATE] regarding my application for a study permit. I appreciate the opportunity to address the specific concerns raised and respectfully submit the following clarifications and supporting evidence."
§2 — ADDRESS EACH CONCERN INDIVIDUALLY (200-300 words per concern)
For EACH item in [PFL_CONCERNS]:
(a) Quote the officer's concern verbatim (use italics or quotation marks).
(b) State your position clearly in 1 sentence ("I respectfully submit that…").
(c) Provide CONCRETE evidence: documents, dates, named persons, amounts. Reference attached annexes by letter (Annex A, B, C…).
(d) Address the underlying suspicion — what is the officer really worried about? Address THAT, not just the surface objection.
(e) Cite the specific regulation or IRCC manual provision your evidence speaks to (e.g. R216(1)(b), OP-12 manual).
§3 — OVERALL POSITION (80-100 words)
Summarise: the combined evidence demonstrates the applicant meets the requirements of [APPLICABLE_SECTION]. Cite ONE Federal Court case briefly if relevant (e.g. for "genuineness of intent" concerns: *Patel v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2020 FC 77* establishes that the officer must consider all evidence holistically and cannot fixate on one factor).
§4 — REQUEST (40-60 words)
"In light of the foregoing, I respectfully request the officer reconsider the concerns raised and approve my application for a study permit. Should the officer require any further information, I am available at [EMAIL] / [PHONE]."
§5 — CLOSING
"[CLIENT_NAME], [DATE]"
ANNEXES — List each piece of supporting evidence:
Annex A: [Document name + date]
Annex B: [Document name + date]
...
CRITICAL CONSTRAINTS:
• Tone: deferential but firm. Officers respond poorly to defensiveness or accusations of bias.
• Maximum 4 pages. Officers do not read 10-page rebuttals; they make decisions on first 2 pages.
• Deadline: [RESPONSE_DEADLINE] — calendar days, not business days. If insufficient time, request extension immediately via the same channel.
• DO NOT introduce new claims not in the original application. Stick to clarifying / supplementing.
• DO NOT threaten judicial review in the PFL response — counterproductive. Save that for after refusal.
End with: "DRAFT PFL RESPONSE — for RCIC review. URGENT: response deadline is [RESPONSE_DEADLINE]. Verify all annex documents are dated and the GCKey upload acknowledges receipt."Purchase the vault to unlock