Bottom line: sudden deposits are not automatically “bad,” but unexplained deposits are a common reason officers doubt the credibility of your funds and refuse under IRPR 179(b).
This guide gives you a closed-loop document chain you can build, so your proof of funds reads verifiable instead of staged.
If you want the “why this happens” overview (beyond deposits), read:
Why IRCC Rejects Visitor Visas Even When You “Have Enough Money” (2026 Reality Check)
Who this guide is for
This is for temporary resident visa (visitor visa) applicants who have bank statements with one or more large deposits (gift, bonus, sale proceeds, repayment) and want to reduce refusal risk by documenting the funds chain properly.
It is also relevant if you are in Canada and later need to extend temporary resident status as a visitor, because the same proof-of-funds credibility logic often applies when you claim you can support yourself without working.
This is part of a broader temporary resident compliance picture. A weak visitor visa file can create issues later when you apply for a work permit, study permit, or a status extension, because officers assess credibility and permit conditions across your history.
The legal anchor (IRPR 179(b))
IRPR 179(b) requires an officer to be satisfied that you will leave Canada by the end of your authorized stay.
In practice, when your funds story looks unreliable, it becomes an intent problem, not just a money problem.
If you want the full 179(b) fix framework, use:
The officer’s lens (what they are trying to rule out)
When an officer sees a large deposit, they are typically trying to rule out:
1) the funds are not really yours
2) the funds are temporary or borrowed in a way you can’t sustain
3) the funds story contradicts your employment or income story
The fix is not writing more. The fix is showing proof that closes the loop.
Visitor conditions and housing plan (why deposits don’t get assessed in isolation)
Officers assess whether you will comply with visitor conditions:
- temporary stay (you will leave Canada at the end of the authorized period)
- no work in Canada without authorization
- credible plan for housing and expenses
If your deposit looks staged and your housing plan is vague, the file often fails under IRPR 179(b).
If you are applying from inside Canada (status extension context), the same funds logic often shows up in practice because your application is still about temporary resident status and conditions. That’s why you should keep your housing plan and funds plan consistent, especially if your work authorization changes and your SIN/employer situation becomes time-sensitive.
A quick table: what officers doubt and what document fixes it
| What the officer may doubt | What to include | Why it helps |
| “Is this money really theirs?” | source proof + transfer trail | makes ownership verifiable |
| “Is the money stable?” | 3–6+ months statements | shows pattern, not a one-day snapshot |
| “Will they run out of money?” | budget + housing plan | connects funds to real expenses |
| “Will they work illegally?” | clear trip duration and ties to home | aligns with permit conditions |
The closed-loop chain (use this structure)
Closed-loop chain:
1) Original account history (3–6+ months statements)
2) Source proof (what created the money)
3) Transfer trail (how it entered your account)
4) A short LOE paragraph that references evidence by name
If any link is missing, do not compensate with “promises.” Missing links are why officers doubt credibility.
A one-page summary table (add this to your application package)
| Account | Currency | Current balance | Large deposit date | Source proof attached |
| Chequing | CAD | $X | DATE | pay stub / gift letter / sale agreement |
| Savings | CAD | $Y | DATE | transfer receipt + source proof |
This makes your file faster to review and harder to misunderstand.
Deposit type by deposit type (what documents actually work)
Gift from parents or family
Document chain:
1) Your statements showing the deposit
2) A gift letter (relationship, amount, date, and that it is a gift, not a repayable loan)
3) The giver’s ability to give (their statements or income proof, as appropriate)
4) Transfer proof (wire receipt, transfer confirmation)
Salary bonus, commission, or back pay
Document chain:
1) Deposit in your statement
2) Pay stub showing the bonus/back pay
3) Employer letter only if the amount is unusually large or irregular
Property sale or asset sale
Document chain:
1) Sale agreement or closing statement
2) Proof you owned the asset
3) Deposit trail into your account
Loan repayment
This is the hardest category to prove cleanly.
Document chain:
1) Proof the loan existed (agreement or prior transfer record)
2) Repayment proof (transfer record + deposit line)
3) A short explanation (who, why, when)
If you cannot prove the loan existed, do not label it as “loan repayment.”
LOE paragraph template (copy-paste and edit)
“On [DATE], I received a deposit of [AMOUNT] into my [ACCOUNT NAME]. This deposit was from [SOURCE NAME] for [REASON: gift/bonus/sale proceeds/repayment]. I have attached [DOCUMENT NAMES] to show the source of funds and the transfer trail. My regular income is from [JOB/BUSINESS], and my bank statements show normal spending patterns over the past [X] months.”
Short. Factual. Verifiable.
Sources checked (for this update)
Fix plan checklist (build your package in order)
1) Trip plan: purpose, dates, and where you will stay (housing).
2) Funds plan: 3–6+ months statements and a one-page summary.
3) Deposit proof: source proof plus transfer trail.
4) Ties plan: what you will return to (employment, studies, obligations).
5) Consistency audit: every claim is backed by a document.
Next steps (what to do after you build the funds chain)
1) Re-read your application form and LOE and confirm every number matches the bank statement.
2) Check your housing plan is documented (host letter plus address proof, or bookings plus budget).
3) Check your ties story is document-backed (employment or studies you return to).
4) Only then submit. Submitting early with a weak chain rarely saves time.
A final consistency check (30 minutes that can save a refusal)
Before you submit, check:
1) Arrival and departure dates: do they match your itinerary and LOE?
2) Housing: is the address clear, and is payment responsibility clearly documented?
3) Status story: does your file read like a temporary visit, not a plan to remain?
4) Deposit story: is every large deposit tied to a document?
If you can’t answer “yes” to all four, fix the weakest link first.
Do not do this (common mistakes that trigger “staged funds” logic)
- Do not submit only a one-day balance screenshot without transaction history.
- Do not move funds through multiple accounts right before applying unless you can document each step.
- Do not label deposits as “loan repayment” if you cannot prove the loan existed.
- Do not hide a large deposit. Explain it with source proof and transfer trail.
A simple “sequence” the officer can follow
1) Purpose and dates
2) Housing plan and who pays for accommodation
3) Funds history and income pattern
4) Deposit proof documents (appendix)
5) Ties that pull you home
If you make the officer guess any of these, IRPR 179(b) risk increases.
