Citizenship

Becoming a Canadian Citizen through Naturalization: Fulfilling residency requirement

Canadian citizen passport

Rosebelle wants to become a Canadian Citizen. She approached our office early in 2020 to seek help with her application. She became a Permanent Resident on March 3, 2018 but had been in Canada since 2007. At the outset she appears to have put in enough time to fulfill the residency requirement of being physically present in Canada for 1,095 days 5 years before her application date.

However, after going over Rosebelle’s immigration records it was determined that she has not met the residency requirement for Citizenship naturalization. She would need 10 more months to be compliant with this requirement.

Becoming a Canadian Citizen

Under the Citizenship Act 2017, an applicant for Canadian Citizenship must be a Permanent Resident, as defined under immigration laws, who has been physically present in Canada for at least 1,095 days during the last five years before his/her application.

This residency requirement as stated in Citizenship Act 2017 5 (1)(c)(i) is calculated as follows:

The applicant is credited with one day of physical presence in the country for every day that he / she spends in Canada since becoming a PR.

The applicant is further credited with half day of physical presence , up to a maximum of 365 days, for every day he / she spends in Canada as an authorized temporary resident or protected person.

Unfortunately for Rosebelle, she was without status when she applied for her PR in 2010 through Spousal Sponsorship In- Canada class, invoking spousal public policy. This means that Rosebelle’s physical presence in Canada as a visitor could not be credited to the residency requirement of her application.

Prior to obtaining her PR status on March 3, 2018, she could only be credited for residency after she received her open work permit from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada on Jan. 2, 2018.

After obtaining her PR status Rosebelle also left Canada to visit family in the Philippines for a total of 4 months further lessening her days of residency.

This is how Rosebelle’s residency was calculated:

First Entry to Canada: November 2, 2007

Visitor Record Expiry: August 9, 2009

Date Open Work Permit was obtained: Jan. 2, 2018

Date PR was obtained: March 3, 2018

Date of application for Citizenship: July 30, 2020

Days physically present as PR : 880 days

Days physically absent as PR: 114 days

Total credit: 766 days

Days physically present as temporary resident: 59 days

Credit: 29.5 Days

Days spent serving a sentence: 0

Days absent: 0 days

Total Credit: 29.5 days

Total Physical Presence: 795.5 Days

The link below show’s Robelle’s residency calculation using the IRCC’s physical presence calculator.

More examples of how residency requirement is calculated is found here.

There are other requirements to become a Canadian Citizen through grant or naturalization. First and foremost, a Permanent Resident of Canada needs to submit a formal application and request for citizenship in order for the legal process to start.

Enumerated below are the criteria that an applicant must meet to obtain Canadian citizenship:

  • Must be a PR of Canada as defined under immigration laws, and has no unfulfilled conditions pertaining to his / her PR status
  • Must be at least 18 years old; or in included in the application of a parent who is over 18 years old
  • Must provide photos
  • Must meet the residency requirement of physical presence in Canada of at least 1095 days during the 5 years before the the application is made
  • Must file a return of income within 3 taxation years that’s within the 5-year eligibility period of the application
  • show adequate knowledge of English or French (for applicants between 18-54 years old)
  • Pass the citizenship test (for applicants between 18-54 years old)
  • take the citizenship oath

The requirements for language profiency, citizenship test and oathtaking may be waived for compassionate reasons for applicants who are mentally and physically unable to comply with them.

You may be eligible for citizenship grant if you have been a PR of Canada for 2 years and had an authorized temporary resident status prior to obtaining your PR. Contact us today for professional help on how to become a Canadian citizen through the naturalization process. Simply fill out the form below. What may look like a straightforward application may actually be complicated like in Rosebelle’s case.

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