Statements of Purpose & cover letters
Study permits, skilled-worker applications, family sponsorship — the AI asks you about gap years, finances, intent, then writes the draft.
1,000+ master prompts for your SOP, refusal response, partnership evidence, study plan. + 3 free AI drafts every day, forever — generate directly on the site, no copy-paste. Same AI toolkit consultants use. Reviewed by you before filing.
A drafting tool, not legal advice. Have a licensed immigration consultant or lawyer review AI-generated drafts before submission.
The actual library · click any prompt · paste into ChatGPT or Claude · or generate on-site
Same library. Two ways to run it. Use whichever fits your workflow — even switch mid-file.
Search 1,208 master prompts. Filter by destination, service, scenario. First one free, no signup.
Edit the DRAFT hand-off line, validate the citations, deliver to your client. 25 min → 2 min per file.
I'm one of the 100,000+ students applying for a Canadian study permit this year — sitting in Mumbai, Manila or Lagos, watching the IRCC processing-time tracker reload. The consultant down the road quoted me CA$2,000 for a Canadian-side RCIC plus a referral fee for the agent here. The YouTube channel I trust says do it yourself. The Reddit thread says one wrong line on the SOP and I get R216(1)(b) refused. So I'm sitting here with the Notes app open at 1am.
This library gives me the Canadian-specific SOPs, refusal responses, GIC explanations and study-plan templates that an RCIC would use — without the RCIC retainer. Every prompt is anchored to the IRPR section a visa officer at Mississauga IRCC actually reads. I run the intake, answer in my own words, get a draft I can defend.
GIC: CA$20,635. First-year tuition: CA$22,000. Flight: CA$1,400. RCIC retainer: CA$2,000. Health insurance: CA$700. I'm pre-spending CA$47,000 before my study permit is even approved. The RCIC fee is the one line I can cut — if I have the right tools.
If my study permit gets refused under R216(1)(b) because the officer wasn't satisfied I'd leave Canada at the end of my stay, my non-refundable college deposit (CA$10,000), my GIC fee, my IELTS, my biometrics — all gone. I have to either re-apply or appeal in Federal Court within 28 days. The retainer to fix a refused file is twice the cost of doing it right the first time.
Every Canadian SOP guide on the internet says I need to prove 'genuine temporary entry'. None of them explain what specific evidence a visa officer looks for. The Reddit comments contradict each other. The consultant's free webinar was actually a sales pitch. The library prompt walks me through it line by line — establish home-country ties, articulate program-rationale, link the program to a return-home career.
I asked ChatGPT to draft my SOP referencing the right regulation. It cited 'IRPR Section 216(c)'. That section doesn't exist — the actual rule is R216(1)(b). If a visa officer's GCMS note records that I cited a non-existent regulation, my credibility is gone before they read paragraph two. The library prompts have the cites pre-baked from the real IRPR text.
Students, work-permit hopefuls, family-sponsorship applicants, Express Entry candidates filing their own files for Canada. You'd rather put CA$2,000 toward your first month's rent in Surrey than toward a retainer.
Filing your own SP application for a DLI college or university. You need a defensible SOP that addresses R216(1)(b), a GIC + tuition financial-support story, a study plan linking the Canadian program back to your home-country career.
You have the CRS score (or close to it). You need help with the work-experience narrative, the proof-of-funds letter, the PNP nomination-rationale write-up — all aligned with what IRCC's EE intake form actually requests.
Spouse, parents, grandparents (when the lottery reopens), dependent children. You need the relationship narrative, the proof-of-genuine-relationship letter pack, the financial undertaking — without a CA$2,500 sponsorship retainer.
Your last study permit / TRV / work permit came back refused. You're filing again — fresh application, reconsideration, or leave-and-judicial-review at the Federal Court (s.72 IRPA). You need a refusal-response that actually addresses the GCMS reasoning, not a generic 'please reconsider' template.
Most visa files come down to four documents. Each prompt walks you through the questions, then drafts the page calibrated to Canada visa office expectations.
Study permits, skilled-worker applications, family sponsorship — the AI asks you about gap years, finances, intent, then writes the draft.
Address every refusal reason point-by-point. The prompt knows the common refusal triggers — R216(c), GTE, finances, intent — and helps you rebut each.
A complete checklist for your visa type. Bilingual where you need it. Each line cites the source so you can verify.
Not a long form to fill. The AI asks the next question based on your last answer, then drafts the artifact when it has enough.
Seven things I'd otherwise be cobbling together at 1am — or paying an RCIC CA$2,000 for. On-site AI drafts, the full Canada-specific prompt library, my own variable vault, free regulatory updates when IRCC moves the goalposts. Bundled, paid once.
Hit 'Generate' on any prompt and the scripted intake + draft renders right here on the site — I never need ChatGPT Plus or Claude Pro for the bread-and-butter SOP/cover-letter work. Three full runs per calendar day, lifetime, on Google Gemini Flash.
Study permit SOPs (DLI-specific), GIC + tuition explanations, R216(1)(b) compliance narratives, PGWP applications, Express Entry letters, PNP narratives, family-sponsorship packs, refusal-recovery letters. Anchored to actual IRPA / IRPR text — no hallucinated cites.
Name, DOB, IELTS bands, GIC details, IRCC application number, DLI code, NOC code, work history — saved once, auto-fills into every prompt. Stop typing my own name 40 times across one filing weekend.
Star the SOP version that finally read right. Add notes to remember what worked. Re-open last Sunday's R216 draft from /saved with one click. My whole Canada visa workspace, organised in one place.
Once I'm in Surrey or Mississauga: a LinkedIn rewrite for the Canadian market, a community Reels script, an introduction note for my future Canadian manager, a thank-you to my referees. Same library, post-arrival.
One-line MCP install — the library appears as a callable tool inside Claude Desktop. I can say 'find me the SP refusal response for R216(1)(b)' and it pulls the right prompt. Goodbye 27 Chrome tabs.
When IRCC bumps the GIC threshold, when the SP cap changes, when a PNP stream reopens — affected prompts refresh within 7 days. The 12 months of regulatory updates is included in the $15.
No subscription. No monthly fee. No 'per file' charge. Pay $15 once on Stripe, use it forever with weekly updates for 12 months. 7-day refund if it doesn't save me one weekend of rewriting my own SOP from scratch.
Each prompt runs a scripted intake in your AI of choice and ships a calibrated draft. Open one below to see the structure — sign up to unlock the full body and run it.
Match a prospect to 5-7 Canadian DLIs across budget, program, GPA, and PGWP eligibility.
Fresh out of 12th, no work experience. SOP avoiding the gap-year + funds + intent triggers.
Address the #1 refusal trigger: unexplained 1-3 year gaps after Grade 12 / Bachelor.
The catalog ships as an MCP server. Run one command and all 1,000+ prompts become searchable tools your AI can call — not just paste-and-go. Type / in Claude Desktop, hand it a client name, and watch Claude pick the right prompt, run the intake, and draft.
Canada, Australia, UK in full depth. Seven more covered for the long-tail services. Every prompt cites a real regulation or case — no hallucinated R216(c) inventions.
Tier 1 (full depth): Canada · Australia · UK — every service, every sub-stream, every regulatory anchor. Tier 2: US · DE · AE · NZ · IE · SG · Schengen — top services covered.
+ 7 more service categories
IRPA · IRPR · Migration Act · UK Appendix · SCC
ITR · EPFO · GIC · PCC · PAN · NOC
1,000+ prompts. 12 countries. $15 once. Lifetime access.
Pay once. Get the full library. Use it for your file today and again the next time you, a sibling, or a friend applies. 7-day refund if it doesn’t earn its keep.
Stripe-secured · billed in USD
Licensed practitioners in Canada are using these prompts in their own files — the same tool that helps them is what you'll be using on yours. Photos are gradient placeholders — we never use stock photos of strangers. Regulator IDs shown are illustrative placeholders unless explicitly confirmed.
“CRS prompt walked a client through 22 questions and surfaced a CEC pathway I was about to miss. My drafting time per file is down from an hour to about fifteen minutes.”
“The refusal-recovery prompt is the one I reach for most. It surfaces the exact paragraph of the officer's reasons to rebut, so I stopped writing emotional rebuttals.”
“I work bilingual files and the SOP intake asks the questions I always forget on French-stream PEQ matters. Saved me from a 90-day stale file last month.”
“BC PNP Tech category prompt is the cleanest intake I've used. I cut my Skilled Worker EOI prep from two hours to about thirty minutes.”
“I run a one-person practice. The MCP slash-commands inside Claude Desktop mean I never copy-paste a prompt template again. Worth it for the workflow alone.”
Create your 🇨🇦 Canada applicant account in 30 seconds. We unlock a starter set of prompts so you can run a full intake → draft loop on your own file before paying anything.
Upgrade later · $15 once · lifetime · 7-day refund
If you are applying to IRCC without a consultant, please remember: AI drafts are starting points, not final answers. Read every line, verify all facts against current IRCC guidance, and strongly consider engaging an RCIC or Canadian immigration lawyer to review your final submission. Errors on Canadian immigration filings can have life-changing consequences including refusal, misrepresentation findings, and multi-year bans.