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It lets you sponsor one relative of any age only if you have no eligible close relative who is already a Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or registered Indian.
The lonely Canadian rule is a narrow exception that allows sponsorship of a relative who would not otherwise qualify. It applies only when you have no living spouse, common-law or conjugal partner, child, parent, sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, niece, or nephew.
That relative must also not already be a Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or registered Indian. If any such eligible relative exists, you cannot use this rule, which is why it applies to relatively few sponsors.
Get a personalised assessment from a licensed ACME advisor, or ask Acey.