
Responding to deteriorating human-rights conditions after the mid-2025 escalation between Israel and Iran, IRCC has opened a humanitarian safety valve for hundreds of failed asylum seekers. A notice published December 19 waives the standard 12-month cooling-off period for Iranian citizens who received a negative refugee decision between December 20, 2024 and December 19, 2025. Those individuals may now immediately apply for a pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA) or, if previously refused, seek a secondary PRRA.
The PRRA process allows migrants facing deportation to present new evidence that they would be in danger if returned home. Until now, most claimants had to wait a full year after a final asylum refusal before filing.
Individuals seeking guidance on PRRA eligibility or other Canadian immigration pathways can turn to VisaHQ, an online visa and passport services platform that regularly assists Iranian nationals and other travellers with up-to-date documentation requirements. The company’s Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) provides step-by-step tools, document checklists and access to expert support, allowing applicants to prepare submissions efficiently and avoid common errors.
Human-rights organisations have pressed Ottawa to relax the rule for countries experiencing sudden upheaval; the Iran exemption marks the third such carve-out this year, after Sudan and Myanmar.
From a corporate-mobility standpoint, the decision will mostly affect employers whose Iranian staff or contractors have lost status and were awaiting removal. Those workers may gain additional months—or permanent residence—if they can show heightened personal risk. Companies should review workforce-planning scenarios and ensure legal counsel contacts employees who might qualify.
IRCC emphasised that the measure does not guarantee stay-of-removal; the Canada Border Services Agency will continue case-by-case enforcement. However, CBSA typically pauses deportations once a PRRA application is filed, meaning removals to Iran are likely to slow in early 2026.
Advocacy groups welcomed the move but called for broader reforms, including automatic stays for all PRRA filers and faster processing times, which currently average nine months.
The PRRA process allows migrants facing deportation to present new evidence that they would be in danger if returned home. Until now, most claimants had to wait a full year after a final asylum refusal before filing.
Individuals seeking guidance on PRRA eligibility or other Canadian immigration pathways can turn to VisaHQ, an online visa and passport services platform that regularly assists Iranian nationals and other travellers with up-to-date documentation requirements. The company’s Canada portal (https://www.visahq.com/canada/) provides step-by-step tools, document checklists and access to expert support, allowing applicants to prepare submissions efficiently and avoid common errors.
Human-rights organisations have pressed Ottawa to relax the rule for countries experiencing sudden upheaval; the Iran exemption marks the third such carve-out this year, after Sudan and Myanmar.
From a corporate-mobility standpoint, the decision will mostly affect employers whose Iranian staff or contractors have lost status and were awaiting removal. Those workers may gain additional months—or permanent residence—if they can show heightened personal risk. Companies should review workforce-planning scenarios and ensure legal counsel contacts employees who might qualify.
IRCC emphasised that the measure does not guarantee stay-of-removal; the Canada Border Services Agency will continue case-by-case enforcement. However, CBSA typically pauses deportations once a PRRA application is filed, meaning removals to Iran are likely to slow in early 2026.
Advocacy groups welcomed the move but called for broader reforms, including automatic stays for all PRRA filers and faster processing times, which currently average nine months.







