Surrogacy Journeys Overseas Childbirth 2025 Can parents immigrate to stay in Canada when they give birth in Canada?

2025 Can parents immigrate to stay in Canada when they give birth in Canada?

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"Go to Canada to have a baby! The child will get the nationality, the whole family will get the Maple Leaf Card, and the pension and medical care will be free in the future!"

Have you heard this phrase more than once? Hasn't it struck a chord in your heart at some point?

I'll start by introducing myself:
My name is Lan Xia, I have been in the business of cross-border birth and overseas birth planning for 9+ years. I have run hospitals in Vancouver and Toronto, had countless meetings with immigration lawyers, tax accountants, and education consultants, and met with too many families:

Flying in with a big belly and saying "one more way for the baby";

The heart of the matter is, in fact--"Can you leave us in Canada in the meantime after the birth?"

What about reality?

The baby was born, the birth paper, passport, and health insurance card were all done;
As soon as the visa expired, the customs seal "snapped" down: "Please leave the country on time."

The helplessness of that moment can really drive a person to tears.

A word to offend your peers:
It's easy to have a child, but trying to "clean up" parenthood by having a child to stay is aAt least 20 years of hard fighting.The
In between are status gaps, lotteries, income thresholds, and long waits and family separations.

Many Canadian maternity ads and short videos focus only on the tens of thousands of dollars in monthly center fees in your pocket, and few dare to tell you the true difficulty of the path before you set out.

In today's post, I'm not going to play official jargon with you, nor am I going to engage in PPT-style science popularization.
I do one thing: put "Can parents immigrate to stay in Canada if they give birth in Canada?"The path, extrapolated from start to finish - how far can it go? How much will it cost? What potholes will be stepped on?

If you are:

  • Expectant Parents Who Are Deciding Whether to Give Birth in Canada
  • If you already have a "plus one" and your child has reached school age, you will start to worry about how to accompany your child to school in the future and whether your parents can stay with you.

Then please allow yourself half an hour to finish this one.
Each section is a place where others have stepped in potholes and paid their tuition, and you still have a chance to avoid them.

🚀 Quick Fact Sheet: Fact Sheet on Childbirth + Parenthood

Let's start with a comparison chart for the "anxious parent" and you'll probably know if it's worth reading this article or not:

burning question Real Answers 2025 Difficulty / Pain Index
Can parents take their status directly after having a child? Don't even think about it. No way.The child is a citizen, you are still a tourist / school / work visa. No way.
Can children later sponsor their parents to immigrate? Can. But only if:18 years old + settled in Canada + 3 consecutive years of high income tax returns + lottery win. ⏳ Ultra-long marathon (20 years to start)
Can I stay for the 20 years I've been waiting? No way. Overstaying = black history, basically blocking all future visa/immigration paths. 💣 High-risk red line
Is it worth it to "age" your parents? Focusing only on parental retirement is basically a losing proposition. It's only worth discussing for the sake of children's education and long-term options. ⚖️ Depends on what you're looking for.
Where is the biggest minefield? They use their children as a "shortcut to immigration" and believe in the "humanitarian" tactic of "staying once they land". 🚫 It's a pit, not a road.

If you're reading this and have the patience to scroll down, it means you're serious about doing 10-20 year family planning.
Next, we walk through the overall logic.

I. Children can take citizenship, but parents do not "automatically" immigrate.

The first question a lot of people ask me is:
"Charlize, the child is Canadian, the Canadian government can't kick out the real parents, can it?"

Sadly, reality is much colder than you think.
The Canadian government's logic is simple and crude:

  • Children are the "future assets" of Canada as a nation;
  • Parents without status, in the eyes of the system, are likely to be"Potential burden + potential risk of delinquency"The

Nationality of children born in Canada

One word on the matter.

You can visualize a picture like this in your head:

Kids this thread:
Born in Canada = direct Canadian citizenship;
With a passport, you can study, work, and enjoy the benefits of your home country for the rest of your life in Canada.

Parents this thread:
What visa you have in your hand is what you are;
A tourist visa is a tourist, a school visa is a student, and a work visa is a temporary worker;
There is no automatic upgrade to PR or citizenship just because you are born a Canadian citizen.

The intersection of two lines:
When the child grows up, he or she may be able and willing to vouch for you;
But that is 18 to 20 years away, and there is a lot of "uncertainty" in between.

You can simplify it by saying that the child is not getting a golden ticket to "save his parents", but a long-term pass to his own life.

Who is this article for?

I'm going to be very honest and say that this is not an article for everyone, it's only for two types of families:

  1. Expectant parents who haven't left yet
    You're on the fence: is this trip worth it? Is it as beautiful as the agency says?
    After reading this, you will either be more certain or simply dismiss the idea, at least no longer be fooled by the phrase "the whole family will emigrate later".
  2. Families in which "Gabo" is already on the ground
    The child's passport is lying in a drawer, and the person has been taken back to the country to be raised;
    Starting to think: when to return to Canada to study? How can my parents accompany me? Is there any chance of reunification in the future?

If you're just curious about whether or not your child can be born in Canada, that's really all you need to know in one sentence.
This post is for families who are really ready to think about "birth + education + future identity" as a 20-year game of chess.

II. What is the status of each child and parent? (Canadian + Chinese perspectives)

A lot of misunderstandings, from here, have run their course.

Canadian "citizenship on the ground"

What are the rules for "citizenship by landing" in Canada? What are the exceptions?

Canada still adheres to a very "ironclad" principle: birthright citizenship (Jus Soli).
Simply put: as long as you are not a diplomat or a hostile soldier; a child born on Canadian territory, airspace, or territorial waters is naturally a Canadian citizen. It doesn't matter if you're a tourist, an international student, or here on a work visa.

The only thing to note is that the children of diplomatic families and special personnel of the United Nations are not protected by this rule; ordinary Chinese families, as long as they enter the country legally and give birth in a regular hospital, the status of their children is very secure.

So, from the point of view of "can the child get Canadian citizenship" -
The answer is pretty consistent: go over there and give birth, basically.

More about the Canadian maternity citizenship policy can be read here:2025 A Complete Guide to Citizenship for Children Born in Canada

Chinese Nationality Law in Perspective: Are Children of Doubly Non-Native Parents Considered Chinese?

The dizzying part is on the Chinese side.
The key point is that China does not recognize dual nationality, but there are ways of dealing with "conflicts of nationality".

For the vast majority of families with children born in Canada to non-Chinese parents who do not have a Canadian PR card, it is important to note that the majority of families with children born in Canada have no Canadian PR card:

  • In Canada:The kid has a dark blue passport and is Canadian;
  • In China:A child with a China Travel Permit is considered a Chinese citizen and can register with the household registration office, go to public schools, get vaccinated, and take the high-speed train, just like any other child.

Only if one of the parents has "settled abroad" (with PR or citizenship) is the child more likely to be treated as an "Overseas Chinese / Foreigner" and go through the visa route back home.

You can think of a 0-18 year old as a Canadian: in Canada, he is a Canadian; in China, he can legally be considered a Chinese; it's really a matter of adulthood when it comes to "which nationality to choose"! The real question of "which nationality to choose" is a matter for adulthood.

Children vs. Parents: A List of Rights in One Table

A lot of families don't have this table in their heads, so there's always the illusion that, "Our family is Canadian, right?"
We are calmly on the table:

Rights / Benefits 👶 Child (Canadian citizen) 🧑 Parents (Visitor / School Visa / Work Visa)
tenure You can live in Canada for the rest of your life. Depends on the visa. You have to leave on the day it's valid.
medical care Most hospitalizations and surgeries are free when you get a health insurance card When you don't have an identity, you can be cut thousands of times with a single visit to the emergency room.
educated Public elementary and secondary schools are free, and local university tuition is much lower If you want to study = international student tuition, 3-4 times the price
(of a machine) operate Working casually as an adult / starting a business / changing jobs Tourists can't work legally, student visas have a limit on working hours, and work visas depend on the employer.
social welfare Possible milk money, tax rebates, future pensions. In the vast majority of cases: no
Border treatment one of us Always "foreigners with or without migratory tendencies".

Read this table and have it in your mind:
The child is Canada's "own son" and you are still labeled as a "temporary visitor" in the system.

Third, to dispel rumors: after the birth of a child, parents can really "automatically" immigrants?

One of the things I dread hearing in counseling is:
"Xia Lan, after we get the child's birth paper, should we go to the immigration office to fill out a form so we can exchange our maple leaf cards?"

I usually take a deep breath before I say it very seriously:
Not only can't you, but if you talk to an immigration officer with this idea in mind, you'll probably get a black mark on the spot for "suspected immigrant tendency".

The "citizenship" of the child and the "immigration status" of the parents are two tracks.

You can remember one word:dual-track systemThe
The child's trajectory: born in Canada → directly to the "citizenship" terminal;
Parental track: still moving step by step on the "tourist / student / temporary worker" path.

It's like:
The child went to Tsinghua, got a student ID, and enjoyed the dormitory, cafeteria, and resources;
Just because you're his real mom and dad doesn't mean you're automatically a Tsinghua professor, much less a dormitory dweller.

Want to stay on campus for a long time, either:
You take the exam yourself / apply for the job to enter Tsinghua (corresponding to: your parents go for skilled migration / study abroad migration / employer sponsorship);
Either the child has enough status to be entitled to "take you in" (equivalent: adult child sponsoring parent through PGP).

There is no law that says, "Because you were born a Canadian citizen, the government has to issue you an identity."

The "18-year time threshold" that must be crossed

So can a child sponsor a parent or not?
You can, but you have to cross three mountains first:

  1. Age off:The child must be at least 18 years old to act as a guarantor;
  2. Residence Off:At the time of sponsorship, the child must have settled in Canada and be a tax resident; if he or she has been raised in the country and has never returned to Canada, it is not possible to talk about sponsoring a parent.
  3. Income Pass (hardest):The "minimum necessary income line LICO + security cushion" is reached for three consecutive years; this usually means that the child will be able to find a stable job after graduation, with an annual salary at a decent level.

Be realistic with your math:
0 years old → 18 years old at university
The "3 consecutive years of income" requirement is possible between the ages of 22 and 25.
So, counting on "child sponsoring parents" is not an 18-year, but a 20+ year family run.

Can parents "stay in Canada" after the birth of their child?

I know the real issues in most people's hearts are not so grandiose:
"The baby is too young for me to bring back home, can I just keep bringing him up in Canada?"
That's what we're trying to answer head on: can you "stay" or not? In what capacity?

passport

Start by turning over your passport: what visa are you on now?

  • 1) Visitor Visa (Tourist Visa)
    The most common: ten-year multiple-entry, single-entry generally give 6 months; after giving birth to a child, after the documents, the time is basically consumed almost; you can try to apply for an extension in the territory (Visitor Record), but can not be unlimited renewals, the immigration officer sees that you have long been "doing nothing but just stay here", it is easy to suspect that You have a "potential immigrant tendency".
  • 2) Study permit (school visa)
    If you or your partner is a student in Canada, you will still be a student after you have a child; you will be able to attend classes and graduate from school, and having a child will not give you any "extra credit" or help you stay in Canada automatically.
  • 3) Work Permit (Work Permit)
    People who have real employers, real jobs, and are working in Canada with a work visa are themselves the protagonists of another road; having a child will not change the duration of your work visa, nor will it make you a PR, so you should renew your visa and go through the immigration program.

What is the risk of staying late and blacking out?

Some seniors or irresponsible agents will whisper to you, "It's okay, no one's checking anyway, so you'll just black out for a few years."

overstay risk

I'll say it three times very seriously:
Never! Never! Never!

In the short term, you may have "gotten over it";
In the long run, it's a gamble on your family's future:

  • Medical care is completely bare bones:Without health insurance, a trip to the emergency room can cost thousands of dollars, and in the case of a serious illness, it's basically "not enough to sell your house";
  • Leaving a black history:Overstay (Overstay) record, will follow you for the rest of your life; in the future you apply for any visa / immigration program, almost always 99% refusal;
  • Even the child's future:20 years from now when the child really wants to sponsor you, the immigration officer will look up your earlier black record and think: "This family has a history of repeated illegal stays."

You have now made a decision to stay for a few more years: you have traded all your children's immigration opportunities for the next 20 years for a few years of "living in the dark". This is not a good deal.

Intermediary most commonly used three "soul soup", you have to learn to dismantle their own

Anyone who tells you that "you can stay after giving birth" can be put on the "blacklisted agents" list. Let's take a look at some of the most common ways to do this:

  • "You can go humanitarian after you give birth. You don't have to wait 18 years."
    Dismantle: Humanitarian (H&C) is for those whose lives would be in danger if they returned to their home countries and who have serious human rights problems, not for Chinese who "won't get Canadian benefits if they go back to China".
  • "When the child goes to school, the parent has a companion visa to stay on."
    Dismantle: Canada does not have an official "companion visa" category, the real operation is either Visitor Record (extended visitor status), or parents go to study by themselves, get a school visa.
  • "Buy a house in Canada, pay taxes, and live there for a long time."
    Demolition: buy real estate ≠ get status. If you buy ten suites, you are just a rich "foreigner"; real estate and immigration status are two lines.

V. Are there any opportunities for parents to immigrate in the future?

After the words "can't stay automatically" and "can't stay in the dark", is there still a chance? Yes, but the logic is completely different.

Immigration to Canada

Route 1 (Passive Waiting): Immigration through PGP Parent Reunification after the child reaches adulthood

It's everyone's favorite line, "The kids will vouch for you later."
Characteristics: parents can do basically nothing now, the protagonist is the future child; to cross: age threshold + three consecutive years of income threshold + lottery mechanism + processing time;
Pros:Parents have low language and educational requirements and a low theoretical threshold.
Drawbacks:Too much time + total uncertainty + policies can change.

Route 2 (proactive): Parents go through the economic category on their own

Here's what I recommend most often, "A child's life is up to him, and parenthood, too, is best in his own hands."
There are many combinations: Study Abroad Immigration (Travel and Transfer → Student Visa → Work Visa → CEC / Provincial Nominee), Employer Sponsorship, Professionals Pathway (Doctors, IT Bulls, Executives), and more.
Pros:Instead of putting all the hope on the children; once the parents get the PR, the cost of children's education will be greatly reduced immediately; the family can design the tax and retirement as a whole.
Drawbacks:Parents have to be willing to learn the language, read the book, and toss it.

Route 3 (Buddhist accompaniment): Long-term family visits & accompanying students, not necessarily requiring a Maple Leaf Card.

There is also a group of families who think, "I don't have to get a PR, I have a good career/assets in China, I just want to spend more time with my kids."
In this case, the spindle will become: Super Visa, Long Term Visitor Record + School Visa for children.
Objective:"It doesn't have to be a license (PR), but it has to be the ability to go and stay if you want to."

Six, PGP four roadblocks: parent reunification immigration in the end difficult where?

Now let's break down the path that all the ads love to mention, but seldom go into details: PGP parental reunification immigration.

PGP Migration

Roadblock 1: Guarantor's Income Redline (LICO + Safety Cushion + 3 consecutive years)

One of the core official requirements for a child to sponsor you in the future is that the sponsor's annual income for the three consecutive years prior to the sponsorship meets the "Minimum Required Income LICO" standard, depending on the size of the family.

In practice, most lawyers advise that it is better to have an additional "safety cushion" on top of the LICO, otherwise it is particularly dangerous to get stuck on the edge.
The point is "how do you count the number of people in the family": the children themselves + their spouses + their own children + the parents who will be sponsored (possibly four elderly people on either side). For each additional person, the annual income requirement goes up a bit. For young people who have just graduated and worked for a few years, this requirement is actually quite aggressive.

Roadblock 2: The child must be in Canada and a tax resident

Many Canadian babies are actually born in Canada → quickly brought back to China, studied and grew up in China → occasionally traveled to Canada to visit family.
A child who grows up this way and chooses to live and work in China as an adult will not be able to talk about "sponsoring his or her parents to immigrate to Canada".
To be eligible to sponsor a parent, the child must: return to Canada to live, study and work permanently; be a bona fide tax resident of Canada; and have a record of filing continuous tax returns for many years.

Roadblock 3: The lottery mechanism - not "if you meet the requirements, you'll get in"

What's even more solid: even if the child's age, income, and tax returns are up to snuff, you still have to face the lottery.
PGP Instead of a "queuing system", these days it's a "lottery system"; a window of time opens up every year, people throw their names into the pool; the INS randomly draws a wholesale invitation, and if they don't get it, they wait until next year.
So often the reality is that some people just meet the criteria and draw well, while others are very well qualified and fail to draw for years on end. This is completely out of your control.

Roadblock 4: Joint and several financial liability for up to 20 years

Even if: the child wins the lottery; the documents are approved; the parents get PR, the story doesn't end there.
As a guarantor, the child has to sign a long-term guarantee agreement, which roughly means:For the next 10 / 20 years, if the parent receives some social assistance in Canada, the government can recover the money from the sponsor.
This can turn out to be a piece of invisible debt for your child when making loans and financial planning for decades to come.

VII. How can parents legally reside permanently while waiting for their green cards?

Since PGP is a long, difficult and luck-dependent road, how are parents going to be there for their children during this long wait?

Canada Super Visa

Super Visa: A "Legal Extra" for Long-Term Parental Visits

If you are not in a hurry to get a PR right away, but would love to be around more during your child's schooling and family stage, the Super Visa is a card that must be looked into seriously.

  • Valid for up to 10 years;
  • A single entry allows for a continuous stay of many years (after the policy was updated, it usually starts at 5 years);
  • Prerequisites: the child is a citizen / PR in Canada and has an acceptable income; parents must have health insurance with a long coverage period.

You can think of it as follows: PGP is "Moving Accounts, Commitment"; Super Visa is "Long-term Visits, Flexible Entry and Exit".

PGP vs Super Visa: which is better for you?

PGP Parental Reunification:The goal is to actually move to Canada and enjoy the benefits; the cost is long waits, uncertainty in the lottery, and heavy sponsorship responsibilities.
Super Visa:The goal is to chaperone, help with the children, and visit family regularly; the cost is that it has been temporary status, medical care is covered by out-of-pocket insurance, and there are no benefits.

Identity Planning for Parents: Visitor Record / Student Visa / Work Visa Combination Play

If your child is in elementary or secondary school in Canada and you want to be more consistently present, there are several common combinations:

  • Entering the country with a tourist visa → Apply for a Visitor Record to extend your stay;
  • One parent studies (school visa), the child goes to public school for free, and the other parent works on a work visa;
  • One parent finds an employer and gets a work visa, while the other parent accompanies the student as a spouse/visitor.

VIII. Full-cycle planning for ages 0-18:

0-6 years: domestic upbringing + document maintenance periodMost doubly non-permanent families, after the birth of their children, choose to bring them back home to raise them. This is the most important thing to worry about in these years:
1. Don't break your papers:Canadian passports are valid for 5 years and should be renewed in advance; Chinese travel certificates are generally valid for 2 years.
2. Laying the groundwork:Health, parenting, and language environment.

6-12 years: the fork in the road between national education vs. international routesWhen it comes time to start elementary school, parents begin to struggle. Do you want to go to a public school to get a head start on Chinese? Or do you want to go to an international school to get used to English?
If you have a clear plan to return to middle school/high school, it's good to get your child used to English early.

Age 12-18: Golden Window for Returning to Canada & Tax PlanningThis is the critical decision-making period. You have to decide: will your child go back to Canada for his/her junior / senior year of high school, or will he/she stay in the country?
Who will accompany the parents if they return? In what capacity? Many families choose to return in their second/third year to retain a domestic base and have time to acclimatize.

18-22 years: four years to lay the foundations for a sponsorship qualificationThe child enters "adult" mode. These four years are crucial from the point of view of "whether the parents' future can be guaranteed":
Work-study, internships, and first jobs after graduation are all laying the groundwork for future ability to meet LICO standards.

IX. The True Value of Children as Canadian Citizens for Home Education and Life Choices

After all the "difficulties" and "pitfalls", you may ask, "What am I going through to have a baby in Canada?"
I'll be honest and boil it down to four words for you:"One more way."The

Canadian Citizenship Advantages

  • Studying in China:Garbo naturally qualifies for many expatriate-only international schools; visas and tuition are treated differently when applying to overseas universities.
  • Go back to Canada to study:Public primary and secondary schools are free; local university tuition is usually a fraction of what it is for international students. The difference in tuition for four years of university is enough to cover most of the cost of having a child that year.
  • A safety net for life as an adult:If you decide to stay in Canada, your life will be relatively stable; if you decide to go to the U.S. and U.K., your visa will be more convenient; and if you encounter a low point in your life, you will have a welfare system to cover your expenses.

X. Is it worth it to realize parental retirement through Canadian birth?

Now let's turn our perspective from the child back to the parent and ask a question that many people are embarrassed to ask:
"Did I go to Canada to have a baby and incidentally find an outlet for my retirement?"

I'll be very direct:
If your core purpose is to "save money for your parents' future retirement in Canada", this is a path that is likely to be a losing proposition.

  • The truth about "free health care" in Canada:You have to buy expensive commercial insurance during the no-status phase; there is a waiting period when you first get your PR; and your health insurance does not cover dental, vision, and medication. During the 20-year wait, you will not enjoy free medical care, but will have to pay for it continuously.
  • Pensions and benefits:Contributory Personal Pension (CPP) You don't get it if you don't work; old age pension is tied to years of residence. Pay out if you don't land.
  • Joint and several liability for the duration of the guarantee:You're on the dole in Canada and it could turn into debt for your kids.

XI. Who is and who is not suitable for this "long march"?

✅ Three categories of relatively "suitable" families

  1. Families that were already planning to migrate:The parents are willing to learn the language, read the book, work, and have children just along for the ride.
  2. Financially sound and risk-resistant families:The money is not needed for "immediate results".
  3. Families who focus on their children's education:The child is not expected to "help his parents out", but rather to make choices in life.

❌ Three types of families that need to hit the pause button

  1. Stud type families:Borrowing money to cover the costs in the hope that "one birth = family turnaround".
  2. Families with extreme mismatches in psychological expectations:Can't accept long separations, can't accept "starting over" in Canada.
  3. Families with serious disagreements within the family:Children are often the ones who are hurt the most.

XII. FAQ:

Q1: Can parents apply for a work visa to work immediately after their child is born in Canada?

No, you can't. A work visa always corresponds to "real employer + real job"; the birth of a child in itself does not give you any right to work.

Q2: How long do I have to wait for Parent Group Program (PGP)?

Rough math: 0-18 years (kids grow up) + 18-22+ years (build up income) + time for lottery hearings. Conservative estimate: 20 years is a start, not a ceiling.

Q3: What happens if I never win the PGP lottery?

That means the road is temporarily blocked. Parents can use the Super Visa for long-term family visits; children will need to continue to improve their income and assets to leave room for future policy changes.

Q4: Can I sponsor my parents in the future if my child has been living in my country?

Theoretically no. The prerequisite is that he has to first return to Canada permanently, become a tax resident, and have a record of full income and tax returns for several consecutive years. Otherwise there is no way to talk about it.

Q5: Will sponsoring a parent affect the child's ability to get a home loan in the future?

Possibly. Banks look at loan applications to assess family burdens; a sponsoring parent means that the child is legally responsible for long-term support, which can affect his "loanable amount" to some extent.

XIII. Conclusion:

As I write this, you've probably figured it out:
Having a child in Canada is definitely not a shortcut for "easy wool-gathering"; it is more like a "high-quality life ticket" for the child's future and a "20-year alternative path" for the whole family. It is more like a "quality life ticket" for the child's future and a "20-year alternative path" for the whole family.

If you're only looking for your parents' own retirement and welfare, I would advise you: do some serious financial math, the odds are that this path is not cost-effective.
If your focus is on your child - hoping that he or she will be able to escape the invasion, choose between the two countries, and have welfare benefits - then "having a child in Canada" is worth planning as a serious option. a serious option.

I'll give you three final sentences as a summary of this piece:

  1. The child's Canadian citizenship, a long-term option for him, is not an immediate exit for parents.
  2. Parenthood and retirement should be in your own hands as much as possible, not pressed on your children.
  3. Any organization/individual that promises you that you will "stay after birth" is not worth the hundreds of thousands of dollars and 20 years you will have to pay.

If you're already on your way, or if you're on the fence and can't always do the math to figure this out, it's also a good idea to sort out the basics of your home and come see me, and we can draw a timeline together of just the one for your family.

This article is organized and published by Surrogate's House, the pictures are from the Internet, if there is any infringement, please contact to delete! Reprinted with permission from the source.https://www.surrogacyjourneys.com/en/994.html
Surrogacy Journeys

作者: Xia Lan

Cross-border fertility and overseas birth planner, practicing for 9 years, has long accompanied Chinese families to have children in the United States, Canada and other places. She specializes in translating professional issues such as visas, nationality policies, and cost budgets into action plans that ordinary families can understand and do. We don't encourage impulse to go abroad, and we don't sell the myth of "having a baby makes the whole family immigrate", we only help you see whether it's worth it or not, whether it's difficult or not, and whether it's suitable for you or not.

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