Check Visa Requirements by Passport
Pick your passport and destination for live requirements — fees, documents, processing times, stay rules and embassy details for your nationality.
Data verified
Nigeria passport holders: Single entry for Canada. Fee: CAD 85–185 (~USD 61.83–134.57). Processing: 8-12 weeks (TRV) / 4-12 weeks (Study). Indicative only — always verify with the official mission before applying.
Overview
Nigerians require TRV (Temporary Resident Visa). Fee: CAD 100 (~NGN 102,000) for Visitor + CAD 85 biometrics. Apply via VFS Global Abuja/Lagos. ETA NOT available for Nigerians. Canada has ~70,000 Nigerian diaspora — strict assessment.
Visa types: TRV Visitor Visa (single/multi-entry, up to 10 years); Super Visa (Parents/Grandparents); Study Permit (growing Nigerian student community); Work Permit (LMIA/IEC); Express Entry/PR; Transit Visa; Family Sponsorship.
Fees & funds
Stay & validity
Validity: Typically 10 years multi-entry or until passport expiry. Max Stay: 6 months per visit (determined at port of entry).
Extension possibleConditional
Overstay penalty: Removal order + 1-year minimum exclusion; future visa applications difficult
How to apply
Requirements
Passport & photo
Required documents: Valid passport (must be valid for entire stay); Online application via IRCC; 35x45mm photo; Bank statement (6 months, CAD 10,000+ recommended); Employment letter + leave approval; ITR (3 years); Property documents; NIN; Family details; Detailed travel itinerary; Hotel/sponsor proof; Purpose letter; Biometrics at VFS Abuja/Lagos (CAD 85 fee); Medical exam if required; Yellow Fever cert (carried).
Visa types (2)
Nigerians require TRV (Temporary Resident Visa). Fee: CAD 100 (~NGN 102,000) for Visitor + CAD 85 biometrics. Apply via VFS Global Abuja/Lagos. ETA NOT available for Nigerians. Canada has ~70,000 Nigerian diaspora — strict assessment.
Canadian Transit Visa (CTV) - free, for Nigerian passport holders (visa-required) transiting a Canadian airport under 48 hours en route to a third country. Canada has no general airside transit, so a visa is needed even to connect.
Common rejection reasons
Common NG rejections (~40-50% refusal rate): (1) Section R179 IRPR — migration intent; (2) Weak ties (unmarried, no property, low income post-Naira devaluation); (3) Insufficient funds; (4) Family ties in Canada raise red flags (~70K Nigerian community); (5) Genuine Temporary Resident assessment fails; (6) 419 document forgery scrutiny — extra strict for Nigerian applications; (7) Asylum claim history affects family members heavily; (8) Past visa refusals carry over; (9) Igbo/Edo state applicants face additional scrutiny due to asylum patterns; (10) Document apostille via Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs Nigeria required.
Good to know