Canadian Citizenship is a status desired by many. It carries with it many rights
and privileges. One such privilege is the benefit of being issued a Canadian passport.
Global Vision Immigration Office will help you obtain Canadian citizenship.
New Canada’s Citizenship Act came to effect on June 11, 2015 and its regulations
how to be eligible to become a Canadian citizenship, you must meet the conditions
in all these areas:
age,
permanent resident status,
time you have lived in Canada (residence),
income tax filing,
intent to reside,
language skills,
how well you know Canada, and
prohibitions.
As a result of 2014 changes to the Citizenship Act, if you have served in or with
the Canadian Armed Forces, you might be able to apply through a fast-track process.
This is based on how long you have served our country, instead of how long you have
lived in Canada. Foreign military members do not need to be a permanent resident
of Canada.
Age
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).
Permanent resident status
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.
Time you have lived in Canada
You must have been physically present in Canada as a permanent resident for at least
1,460 days during the six years immediately before the date of your application.
You must also be physically present for at least 183 days during each of four calendar
years that are fully or partially within the six years immediately before the date
of application. These requirements do not apply to children under 18.
Exceptions to these requirements apply for certain Crown servants and certain family
members of Crown servants. When calculating time you have lived in Canada, you can
only count time spent after you became a permanent resident of Canada. Use our online
tool to find out if you have lived in Canada long enough to apply to become a citizen.
Income tax filing
You must have met your personal income tax filing obligations in four taxation years
that are fully or partially within the six years immediately before the date you
apply.
Intent to reside
You must declare your intent to reside during the citizenship application process.
To become a citizen, you must indicate your intention to:
live in Canada,
work outside Canada as a Crown servant, or
live abroad with certain family members who are Crown servants.
Once you become a Canadian citizen, you have the right to enter, remain in, or leave
Canada, one of the basic rights of citizenship.
take part in short, everyday conversations about common topics;
understand simple instructions, questions and directions;
use basic grammar, including simple structures and tenses; and
show that you know enough common words and phrases to answer questions and express
yourself.
If you are 14 to 64 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.
Use our wizard to see if you have the proof we will accept. The citizenship application
guide also contains the type of proof we will accept. Second, we will note how well
you communicate to staff or a citizenship officer during your interview. A citizenship
officer will make the final decision on your application, including how well you
can communicate in English or French.
How well you know Canada
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 64 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. All you need to know for
the test is in our free study guide, Discover Canada: The Rights and Responsibilities
of Citizenship. We will send you a copy of it once we get your application. The
questions in the citizenship test are based on this study guide.
Prohibitions
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.
Once your application is submitted Citizenship and Immigration Canada all future
correspondence and communications Pertaining to your application directly will be
sent to Global Vision Immigration Office. Our office will continue to be your legal
representative until a final determination is made on your Citizenship application
by a Citizenship judge. Should any issue arise in the processing of your Citizenship
application, Global Vision Immigration Office will address it immediately.