Canada is rich in culture and opportunity. Many permanent residents want to stay in Canada for the rest of their lives as citizens, and the Canadian Citizenship application can help them pursue that dream.
Our team of citizenship experts can help you determine if you are eligible to apply for Canadian citizenship, assist you with your citizenship application and advise you of the best measures you should take to obtain Canadian citizenship. Generally, anyone who is born in Canada is automatically a Canadian citizen. However, people wanting to acquire Canadian citizenship can do so in a number of ways. In certain situations, a person who was not born in Canada can apply for a certificate of citizenship showing that he or she derived citizenship at birth from a Canadian citizen living abroad.
To be eligible to become a Canadian citizen, you must meet the conditions in all these areas:
You must be at least 18 years old to apply. To apply for citizenship for a child under 18: you must be the child’s parent, adoptive parent or legal guardian, the child must be a permanent resident, and one parent must be a Canadian citizen or apply to become a citizen at the same time (this also applies to adoptive parents).
You must have permanent resident (PR) status in Canada, have no unfulfilled conditions related to that status, and your PR status must not be in question. This means you must not: be under review for immigration or fraud reasons, or be under a removal order (an order from Canadian officials to leave Canada), or have certain unfulfilled conditions related to your PR status. You do not need to have a PR card to apply for citizenship. If you have a PR card, but it is expired, you can still apply for citizenship.
You must have been physically present in Canada as a permanent resident for at least 1,095 days during the five years immediately before the date of your application. This requirement do not apply to children under 18.
You must have met your personal income tax filing obligations in three taxation years that are fully or partially within the five years immediately before the date you apply.
Canada has two official languages—English and French. To become a citizen, you must show that you have adequate knowledge of one of these languages. You have to present one of the following evidence: Proof of successful completion of secondary or post-secondary education in English medium of instructions. Proof of language proficiency test IELTS or CELPIP with CLB level 4 in Speaking and Listening skills (expired results are acceptable). Proof of successful
completion of Government-funded English as a Second language program such as LINC with CLB level of 4 in Speaking and Listening Skills. If you are 14 to 55 years of age, you must send documents with your citizenship application that prove you can speak and listen in English or French at this level.
To become a citizen, you must understand the rights, responsibilities and privileges of citizenship, such as voting in elections and obeying the law. You must also show, in English or French, that you understand Canada’s: history, values, institutions and symbols. If you are 14 to 55 years of age, when you apply for citizenship, you will need to take a citizenship test to show you have adequate knowledge of Canada and the responsibilities and privileges of citizenship. It is usually a written test, but it is sometimes taken orally with a citizenship officer.
If you have committed a crime in or outside Canada you may not be eligible to become a Canadian citizen for a period of time. For example if you: are in prison, on parole or on probation in Canada, or are serving a sentence outside Canada, have been convicted of an indictable offence in Canada or an offence outside Canada in the four years before applying for citizenship, or are charged with, on trial for, or involved in an appeal of an indictable offence in Canada, or an offence outside Canada. Time in prison or on parole does not count as time you have lived in Canada. Time on probation also does not count if you were convicted of a crime.