
Canada Visa for Filipinos: Complete 2026 Guide (Visitor Visa / TRV)
This guide is the rulebook: who needs a visa, how much it costs, how long it takes, and what to submit. The harder question — will yours actually pass?— needs your specific documents read against the patterns that get applications refused on this corridor. That's what TravelReady does. Free check at the bottom.
Quick Facts: Canada Visa from Philippines
You can read the rules anywhere. Find out if YOUR Philippines → Canada application actually holds up — free, in under a minute.
Do Philippines Citizens Need a Visa for Canada?
Yes. Philippines passport holders require a visa to enter Canada for most purposes — visitor, business, study, work, and family categories all need pre-approval. The information below describes the standard process and the most common refusal triggers on this corridor.
Before you apply: the refusal you have to beat
Under section 179 of Canada's immigration regulations, the officer must be satisfied you will leave at the end of your stay. Filipino visitor-visa refusals typically cite weak ties, unclear or insufficient funds, or relying on a relative's invitation without independent evidence — and the fee is not refunded when an application is refused.
The reassuring part: these refusals are almost always preventable. They come down to how your case is presented, not who you are:
- Insufficient or inconsistent proof of funds — single large deposits with no documented source, balances that don't match declared income
- Weak ties to Philippines — no documented employment, studies, property, or family obligations to show you will return
- Incomplete or mismatched documentation — dates, names, and amounts that contradict between documents
- Unclear or implausible purpose — an itinerary or story the officer has to guess at
Step-by-Step: How to Apply
- Apply online through IRCC. Create or sign in to your IRCC secure account and complete the visitor visa (TRV) application. Answer every question consistently with your passport and documents. Apply directly at canada.ca — not through markup intermediaries.
- Pay the fees. Pay the CAD $100 visitor-visa fee and the CAD $85 biometrics fee online. Keep the receipts; the biometrics are valid for 10 years once given.
- Give biometrics at the Manila or Cebu VAC. After you receive the Biometric Instruction Letter, book and attend the Canada Visa Application Centre within about 30 days. Processing starts only after this step.
- Submit strong, independent supporting documents. Provide proof of funds with a stable history, evidence of ties to the Philippines (employment or OFW records, business, family, property), a clear purpose and itinerary, and — if visiting family — an invitation plus the host's status documents that supplements rather than replaces your own evidence.
- Respond to any request and send your passport. IRCC may ask for more documents or your passport for visa placement. Respond quickly — delays here extend processing. Track status through the official portal.
- Receive your visa and travel. Once approved, your TRV is placed in your passport (often multiple-entry, valid up to passport expiry). The visa gets you to a Canadian port of entry; the border officer sets your actual permitted stay on arrival — usually up to six months.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do Filipino citizens need a visa for Canada?
Yes. Filipino passport holders need a visitor visa, officially a Temporary Resident Visa (TRV), to enter Canada. The Philippines is not on Canada's visa-exempt list, so the Electronic Travel Authorisation (eTA) does not apply. You apply online through your IRCC secure account, then give biometrics. There is normally no in-person interview.
How much does a Canadian visitor visa cost for Filipinos?
The visitor visa (TRV) government fee is CAD $100 per person, plus a CAD $85 biometrics fee (valid for 10 years once given). A family applying together may pay a capped biometrics fee. These are IRCC government fees — the Visa Application Centre may charge a small separate service fee. Confirm the live amounts on the IRCC fee list before paying.
Where do Filipinos give biometrics for a Canadian visa?
After you submit online and pay, IRCC sends a Biometric Instruction Letter. You then book and attend a Canada Visa Application Centre (VAC) in Manila or Cebu to give fingerprints and a photo. Applicants aged 14-79 must provide biometrics, generally within 30 days. Processing begins only once biometrics are completed.
Does an invitation from a Canadian relative guarantee a visa?
No. There is a large Filipino community in Canada and invitation letters from relatives are common, but an invitation does not by itself secure approval. You must independently show you can fund the trip and that you have genuine reasons to return to the Philippines — stable employment or business, family, property, or studies. Treat the invitation as one supporting document, not the heart of your case.
Why are Canadian visitor visas refused for Filipino applicants?
Under section 179 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, the officer must be satisfied you will leave Canada at the end of your authorised stay. Refusals typically cite weak ties to the Philippines, insufficient or unexplained funds, an unclear purpose, or over-reliance on a relative's invitation. If you are an Overseas Filipino Worker, document your employment and remittance history clearly. Consistent, well-evidenced finances beat a high last-minute balance.
Can a visitor visa lead to studying, working, or immigrating?
They are separate streams. To study you need a study permit (with a provincial attestation letter and a designated learning institution); to work you generally need a work permit; and permanent residence for skilled applicants runs through Express Entry, where the Philippines is a major source country. Do not use a visitor visa as a backdoor — misrepresentation is a serious refusal and bar risk.
How long can I stay, and is it multiple-entry?
Canadian visitor visas are commonly issued as multiple-entry and can be valid up to the expiry of your passport. The visa lets you travel to a Canadian port of entry; a border services officer decides how long you may stay on each visit — usually up to six months. Check the date the officer gives you, and extend from inside Canada before your status expires if you need longer.
You've read the rules. Now find out if YOUR application will pass.
Most refusals come from documents that look fine to the applicant but don't to an officer. This guide tells you what to submit. TravelReady tells you whether what you've actually prepared holds up.
Free check. No credit card. You only pay if you want the full pre-submission review.
Last verified: 1 June 2026 against official government sources. Visa rules change without notice — always confirm the latest fee and processing time on the relevant embassy or immigration website before submitting.
