If you’re facing a Canadian removal order, you need to act fast. There are three types of removal orders—Departure, Exclusion, and Deportation—each carrying different consequences and timelines. You have legal rights, including the right to appeal and access legal representation, but critical deadlines apply. Missing them can permanently eliminate your options. Understanding your specific order type, appeal eligibility, and available legal avenues like a Stay of Removal could determine whether you remain in Canada.
Key Takeaways
- Canada issues three types of removal orders—Departure, Exclusion, and Deportation—each carrying distinct consequences and rules regarding return eligibility.
- You have the right to appeal a removal order, typically within 30 days, through the Immigration Appeals Division or Federal Court.
- Ignoring a removal order can trigger a Canada-wide arrest warrant and seriously damage your credibility with immigration authorities.
- A Stay of Removal can temporarily pause enforcement, while a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) evaluates persecution risks before removal is carried out.
- Acting immediately upon receiving a removal order is critical, as missing deadlines can permanently eliminate your available legal options.
The Three Types of Canadian Removal Orders
Canada issues three types of removal orders, and the type you receive determines your timeline, your right to appeal, and whether you can ever return.
- A Departure Order requires you to leave within 30 days and confirm your exit with Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA); if you don’t, it automatically converts to a Deportation Order.
- An Exclusion Order bars you from returning for one year, or five years if misrepresentation was involved.
- A Deportation Order is the most serious. It permanently bars your return unless you obtain an Authorization to Return to Canada (ARC).
Each order also carries different rules around repaying CBSA-covered removal costs. Understanding which order you’ve received isn’t just important—it’s the essential first step in determining what legal options remain available to you.
What Happens If You Ignore a Removal Order?
Ignoring a removal order doesn’t make it go away, it makes your situation markedly worse.
CBSA can issue a Canada-wide arrest warrant, leading to your detention and forced removal. You’ll also face stricter reporting conditions and potential refusals on any future Authorization to Return to Canada application.
Non-compliance damages your credibility with immigration authorities in every future proceeding.
It signals disregard for Canadian law, which weighs heavily against you in humanitarian appeals, PRRA assessments, and Humanitarian & Compassionate grounds applications.
Voluntary compliance, even after a misstep, generally preserves better options than avoidance does.
Acting quickly can still make a meaningful difference in your outcome.
Tip: If you’ve missed a reporting date or CBSA interview, don’t hide; re-engage immediately and seek legal advice.
Who Can Appeal a Removal Order in Canada?
Not everyone facing a removal order has the right to appeal. Eligibility depends on your immigration status and the nature of the inadmissibility.
If you’re a:
- permanent resident,
- a foreign national holding a permanent resident visa,
- or a Convention Refugee or Protected Person,
you can appeal through the Immigration Appeal Division (IAD) of the Immigration and Refugee Board.
However, appeal rights are excluded in serious cases. If you received a Canadian sentence of six or more months, or committed a foreign offence punishable by ten or more years in Canada, you lose your right to appeal.
The same applies to organized criminality, security grounds, and human or international rights violations.
The deadline to file your Notice of Appeal is typically 30 days, so act immediately.
Removal Order Deadlines That Determine Your Options
Once a removal order is issued, deadlines start running immediately, and missing them can permanently eliminate your legal options.
If you received a departure order, you must leave within 30 days and confirm your exit with CBSA, or it automatically converts to a deportation order.
A departure order gives you 30 days to leave—miss that window, and it becomes a deportation order.
If you’re appealing to the Immigration Appeal Division, you typically have 30 days to file your Notice of Appeal.
For Federal Court judicial review, you have 15 days if you’re inside Canada or 60 days if you’re outside.
A PRRA application must be filed promptly after receiving your eligibility notification.
Some remedies disappear within days of receiving your order.
The takeaway: Identify your order type, record every deadline, and seek legal advice immediately—waiting even a short time can close doors that can’t be reopened.
How a Stay of Removal Buys You Critical Time
When you’re facing imminent removal, a stay of removal can pause enforcement and give you the time needed to pursue remaining legal options.
A stay can arise automatically; for example, when a PRRA application is in progress, or through a Federal Court order.
To obtain a court-ordered stay, you must demonstrate three things: a serious legal issue exists, you’ll suffer irreparable harm if removed, and the balance of convenience favors granting the stay.
Courts assess these factors carefully, so your application must be thorough and well-supported.
Time is critical here. You’ll need to act immediately upon receiving your removal order. Missing this window can eliminate the option entirely. Consulting with an immigration lawyer or consultant is crucial.
A stay doesn’t resolve your case, but it preserves your ability to fight it properly.
What Is a PRRA and Could It Protect You?
A Pre-Removal Risk Assessment, or PRRA, is a legal process that evaluates whether you’d face persecution, torture, a threat to life, or cruel and unusual treatment if removed to your home country.
It’s not automatic. You need an invitation or eligibility notification from IRCC, and strict deadlines apply. Many applicants must also wait 12 months after a negative refugee decision before qualifying, though IRCC can waive this if country conditions have suddenly worsened.
A PRRA in progress can pause your removal while a decision is being made. A positive result may grant you protection status. A negative result typically reactivates removal.
As of 2026, decisions are being rendered quickly, leaving little time to prepare. Seek legal help immediately after receiving any PRRA notification.
Can Humanitarian and Compassionate Grounds Stop Your Removal?
Humanitarian and Compassionate (H&C) grounds allow you to apply for permanent residence based on significant hardship, family ties, establishment in Canada, or the best interests of any affected children. But, filing an H&C application doesn’t automatically stop your removal.
Unlike a PRRA, an H&C application doesn’t trigger an automatic stay of enforcement. You’ll need to pursue a separate stay of removal through Federal Court or another legal avenue to pause enforcement while your H&C application is being decided.
Factors like how long you’ve lived in Canada, your community ties, employment history, and the impact on your children can strengthen your application.
Because H&C applications are complex and removal timelines are strict, seeking legal advice immediately gives you the best chance of using this option effectively.
Returning to Canada After a Removal Order
Once you’ve been removed from Canada, your ability to return depends entirely on the type of removal order you received.
If you left under a departure order and confirmed your exit with CBSA, you can reapply like any other applicant.
If you received an exclusion order, you must wait out the 1-year ban (or 5 years for misrepresentation) and repay any removal costs CBSA covered.
A deportation order is the most serious. It permanently bars your return unless you obtain an Authorization to Return to Canada (ARC).
To qualify, you’ll need to demonstrate rehabilitation, a clean record, compliance history, a clear purpose of travel, and full repayment of any CBSA-covered costs.
Each path back has distinct requirements, so understanding your order type is essential.
How Canadian Currents Immigration Services Can Help
Managing a removal order on your own (whether you’re fighting enforcement, preparing a PRRA, or planning your return after removal) is difficult without a clear understanding of immigration law and tight deadlines.
Our team can assess your removal order type, identify available appeals and defences, prepare PRRA and H&C applications, seek stays of removal, pursue Federal Court judicial review, and guide you through ARC applications.
Whether your situation involves an IAD appeal, an urgent stay motion, or a complex deportation order, acting quickly matters.
Contact Canadian Currents Immigration Services as soon as you receive a removal order to protect your status and your future in Canada.

We serve ALL of Canada. Currently have offices Western Canada — Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Kamloops and Red Deer. We also have the infrastructure to work with any of our clients virtually — even from the furthest regions of the Yukon to Newfoundland.
Call (778) 331-1164 [toll free 1 (844) 715-0940] to get routed to the best office for you or contact us online to schedule an appointment.
We also have a dedicated intake form to help you get the ball rolling. Our intake team will review your specific case and advise you on the next steps to take as well as what to expect moving forward.
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Alfonso Chen
IMMIGRATION LAWYER
Alfonso is a lawyer of our Vancouver office who provides services in both English and Mandarin. Prior to joining our firm, he worked at a full-service law firm for over four years, where he helped clients with a wide variety of family law matters, from drafting prenuptial agreements to negotiating terms for and drafting separation agreements to representing clients for divorces.


