IRCC’s Temporary Public Policy (signed 2026-05-19) allows delegated officers to exempt unaccompanied minors from two timing-based refugee claim ineligibility rules (IRPA A101(1)(b.1) and A101(1)(b.2)), improving access to the Refugee Protection Division for children without a parent or legal guardian in Canada. The TPP—guidance updated 2026-06-05—does not change other ineligibility grounds (e.g., STCA, security, serious criminality) and requires formal proof of guardianship.
Soheil Hosseini
June 5, 2026
Jurisdiction
Federal
Week
Week 23
Impact
Moderate
Programs Affected
IRCC temporary policy exempts unaccompanied minors from select refugee claim ineligibility rules
Summary: Canada has introduced a Temporary Public Policy allowing officers to exempt unaccompanied minors from two timing-based refugee claim ineligibility rules under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, improving access to the Refugee Protection Division for children without a parent or legal guardian in Canada. Source: IRCC. Date of update: 2026-06-05. In a significant shift for child asylum seekers, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has updated its Program Delivery Instructions to implement a Temporary Public Policy (TPP) signed on 2026-05-19. The TPP permits delegated officers to grant exemptions from ineligibility under IRPA A101(1)(b.1) (claims filed more than one year after entry) and A101(1)(b.2) (claims made 14 or more days after entering from the U.S. between ports of entry) when the claimant is an unaccompanied minor—defined as under 18 and without a parent or an adult legally responsible for them in Canada at the time of the claim. Proof of legal guardianship requires formal documentation, such as a certified court order. The change affects the referral of claims to the Refugee Protection Division (RPD) of the IRB. As a reminder, per A100(1.1), the burden remains on claimants to establish eligibility and answer questions truthfully. The TPP does not alter other grounds of ineligibility—such as those related to the Safe Third Country Agreement (A101(1)(e)), prior claims, security, serious criminality, or human/international rights violations—nor does it change suspension rules under A100(2) and A103(1) when admissibility issues arise. IRCC notes that the timing provisions in A101(1)(b.1) and A101(1)(b.2) apply only to claims made on or after 2025-06-03; the new TPP creates a targeted child-focused exemption to those specific provisions. The department has updated internal guidance accordingly. Impact analysis:
- Positive: The policy should reduce procedural exclusions for vulnerable children who, due to their circumstances, may miss statutory filing windows, thereby enhancing access to protection and aligning processing with child-welfare considerations.
- Potential challenges: Operational consistency will depend on clear verification of “unaccompanied” status and documentation of guardianship. The exemption may modestly increase referrals to the RPD, with resource implications. Importantly, it does not affect other ineligibility bases (e.g., STCA or serious criminality), so some minors may still be found ineligible on non-timing grounds. Source: IRCC (Program Delivery Update—Temporary Public Policy on unaccompanied minors and eligibility)
Date of update: 2026-06-05
Tags: IRCC, Canada immigration, Refugees, Unaccompanied minors, Temporary Public Policy, IRPA A101(1)(b.1), IRPA A101(1)(b.2), RPD, IRB, Safe Third Country Agreement, Asylum eligibility, Program Delivery Instructions We will continue to monitor IRCC guidance for implementation details and any updates to the TPP’s scope or duration.
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