How Advocate Finder helps
Advocate Finder reviews your inquiry and helps route it to lawyers who match your legal issue, Montreal location, and availability. We are not a law firm and do not provide legal advice.
Submit your legal inquiryTell us what happened and Advocate Finder can help route your request to lawyers who handle immigration matters in Montreal.
Immigration law may involve applications, refusals, permits, sponsorships, status issues, hearings, or removal concerns. These matters often depend on documents, dates, eligibility rules, and communication from immigration authorities.
Advocate Finder reviews your inquiry and helps route it to lawyers who match your legal issue, Montreal location, and availability. We are not a law firm and do not provide legal advice.
Submit your legal inquiryVisa refusals
Work permits
Study permits
Sponsorship applications
PR applications
Refugee claims
Deportation or removal concerns
You received a refusal, procedural fairness letter, removal notice, or deadline.
Your permit, visa, PR card, or status is expiring soon.
You need help choosing the right application or appeal path.
Your family sponsorship, work permit, study permit, or PR application is delayed.
There are inadmissibility, criminality, medical, or misrepresentation concerns.
You have a hearing or interview scheduled.
Current immigration status and expiry dates.
Application type, submission date, receipt numbers, and online account updates.
Refusal letters, procedural fairness letters, notices, or officer correspondence.
Passport details, travel history, work or study history, and family information.
Documents already submitted and documents still requested.
Important deadlines, hearing dates, or removal dates.
Before the form
Complete the short form below. The more detail you provide, the better we can route your request.
FAQ
Not every situation requires a lawyer, but speaking with one may help if documents, deadlines, money, safety, immigration status, court, or important rights are involved.
You may want to speak with a lawyer as soon as possible if there is a deadline, hearing, limitation period, closing date, notice, denial letter, or urgent risk.
Advocate Finder reviews your inquiry and helps route it to lawyers who may match the legal issue, location, and availability. A lawyer may contact you to discuss next steps.
We try to route suitable inquiries, but submitting a request does not guarantee that a lawyer will accept or respond to the matter.
Your information is used to review and route your inquiry. Do not include unnecessary sensitive details, and review the privacy policy for how information is handled.
No. Advocate Finder is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. A lawyer must review your specific facts before giving legal advice.
Montreal Immigration Law Intake
Complete the short form below. The more detail you provide, the better we can route your request with the right city and practice-area context.
Confidential Intake Form
Complete this guided form so your inquiry can be reviewed, scored, and prepared for lawyer intake matching.
Montreal immigration law intakes often involve bilingual communication, study permits, work permits, sponsorship, permanent residence, Quebec-related documentation, refusals, status restoration, and deadlines from immigration authorities. A local page helps users organize status, location, language, and documents.
AdvocateFinder uses this page to collect the facts a reviewing lawyer will usually need first: the legal category, the city, the timeline, the documents already received, and the result you are trying to reach.
Montreal immigration inquiries may involve documents, deadlines, and communication in English, French, or another language. Users should state their preferred language and identify whether the issue is connected to work, study, sponsorship, status, travel, or a government request.
A clear intake should separate facts already submitted from documents still requested. This helps a lawyer understand whether the immediate issue is a refusal, delay, eligibility question, status expiry, restoration concern, or application strategy question.
A Montreal student, worker, visitor, sponsor, or permanent residence applicant received a refusal, request, delay, or deadline.
A user needs help with status, Quebec-related documents, family sponsorship, work or school changes, travel, or restoration.
An immigration issue overlaps with employment, housing, family, language, or administrative documents.
Current status, expiry date, application type, file number, refusal or request letter, prior submissions, and government correspondence.
Language preference, employer or school details, sponsor information, address, travel history, and family information.
Deadlines, missing documents, prior representative details, uploaded forms, and any linked family, work, or housing issue.
Montreal legal matters can involve bilingual communication, Quebec civil law context, immigration, housing, family law, employment, business contracts, tax, and creative-sector work.
Users should include whether they need service in English, French, or another language, and should identify the agency, employer, landlord, business, property, or court connected to the matter.
A strong Montreal intake separates urgent deadlines from background facts and includes the documents that created the legal concern.
A Montreal immigration law lawyer can review the facts more efficiently when the intake explains what happened, when it happened, where it happened, who is involved, and what documents already exist. That helps the lawyer identify urgency, jurisdiction, conflict concerns, and the practical next step.
The intake form on this page is not a substitute for legal advice. It is a structured way to prepare the information needed for lawyer review so the first conversation can focus on strategy, timing, and possible options.