Note: as I am more and more wont to do, most of what I post here is meta or macro analysis, about the bigger picture and underlying principles.
For the OP,
@mu3id, odds are good there is no problem, nothing to worry about.
My spouse PR card will expire in July 2024. I am a Canadian citizen and we both are currently in Pakistan.
I have a job opportunity coming up in uae and I might have to go there by march 2024 to start the new job/find housing etc. the family will join later .
My question is whether this will be impact the PRTD as technically we aren't cohabiting temporarily.
Thanks
Note regarding "PRTD renewal" (from topic title): Permanent Resident Travel Documents cannot be renewed. I assume the subject here is eligibility for a PR card or PR Travel Document relying on accompanying-Canadian-spouse Residency Obligation credit.
Short Answer as to Effect of Short Periods of Living Separately (for PRs relying on accompanying-Canadian-spouse RO credit):
Odds are probably good, and actually quite likely very good, there is no need to worry about your spouse's RO credit just because you are living separately for some relatively short period (less than a year). In particular, if you and your spouse were
settled and
residing together IN Canada for a substantial period of time BEFORE relocating outside Canada, and you have been living together for most of the last five years, there should be NO problem . . .
NO need to read any more of this post.
Beyond that, you pose a good question, one that goes to the difference between what meets requirements versus what might trigger issues in assessing the facts or computing what suffices to show the requirements are met.
Simplified example: 730 days (or more) credit toward RO compliance meets the requirement. But when might a PR's claim to 730 days (or more) credit be challenged?
Some Particular Observations:
So long as the total credit toward meeting the RO otherwise adds up to 730 days within the relevant five years (such as the date a PR Travel Document application is made), the PR is in compliance with the RO and meets that eligibility requirement.
Periods of time a PR is living abroad, and separately from their Canadian citizen spouse, will not count as days given credit toward meeting the PR Residency Obligation.
Days the PR is "
accompanying" their Canadian citizen spouse abroad will count as if they were days spent IN Canada. And, again, as long as the total credit adds up to 730 days within last/relevant five years, that meets the RO.
So, "
technically," if even if the citizen-spouse lives apart from and is not with the PR for lengthy periods of time, but a total fewer than 1094 days within the relevant five years, and the PR is "
accompanying" the citizen-spouse at least 730 days during that five year period of time, the PR is complying with the RO.
The key to that, however, is that the PR is in fact considered to be "
accompanying" the citizen spouse,
leading to longer observations . . . leading to . . .
Technically This, Practically That; Further Observations Re Wrinkles et al:
I apprehend that
@canuck78 is alluding to potential wrinkles in RO computations relying on the
accompanying-citizen-spouse credit.
As noted above, as long as you and your spouse were settled and residing together IN Canada for a substantial period of time BEFORE relocating outside Canada, the risk of wrinkles (problems) should be low, and very low as long as generally, overall, you have been, usually, cohabitating . . . that is, you have been "
ordinarily residing" together. A single relatively short period (less than a year) of living separately should NOT affect this.
In which case, again, NO need to read further.
But again, you ask a good question. Easy cases are easy. As easy as most cases go, it can and will get more complicated in a lot of not-so-easy cases. What circumstances might trigger not-so-easy, could be a problem, examinations?
For example, as I noted above, as long as the credit for days the PR is
accompanying the citizen-spouse add up to at least 730 (within five years), that meets the RO. So the citizen spouse and PR could be living apart for more than they have been living together, over the course of the previous five years, and the PR still meets the RO as long as they have been
accompanying the citizen-spouse at least 730 days. Just what days get counted as "
accompanying" the citizen-spouse is usually easy, days ordinarily residing together, days cohabitating. But that does not always tell the tale. Fair guess that if the PR and citizen spouse report living together just 735 days out of the previous five years, that's not going to get an immediate pass but, rather, risk triggering elevated scrutiny, a closer and more in-depth examination and evaluation of the facts.
Which brings this to your reference to the term "
technically," suggesting apprehension about how this RO credit is
practically computed. And while my sense is that in your situation, in particular, you and your spouse were settled and living together in Canada for a significant period of time before you relocated to Pakistan, so there should be NO problem,
you ask a damn good question, a practical question, in regards to what might trigger IRCC (in a PR TD or PR card application) to question RO compliance if and when the PR and spouse are not living together for significant periods of time. Yeah, good question. Technically, 730 days accompanying the citizen spouse is good enough. But when the couple are not together for significant periods of time, what does that practically mean, how might lengthy periods of separation affect the computation of RO?
Cohabitation is an important element in calculating this RO credit, but that is because the practical approach (not the "
technical" approach) to computing this credit (usually, in most but NOT all cases) is based on counting days the PR is "
ordinarily residing" with their citizen spouse. That is, days the PR is ordinarily residing with their citizen spouse are generally considered to count as days accompanying the citizen spouse.
In contrast, as you probably discerned from my use of emphasis and quotes, the technical term which looms far larger in these cases is what constitutes "
accompanying" the citizen spouse. "
Technically" the days a PR is "
accompanying" their Canadian citizen spouse outside Canada will be given credit as if those days were spent IN Canada. So, again "
technically," 730 such days within the previous five years meets the PR's Residency Obligation.
The real question, the important question, is what is needed to show the PR is
accompanying the citizen-spouse those days.
It warrants noting that IRCC's instructions, guides, and PDIs are continually being updated . . . that means changed. The guide for PR TD applications, for example, was updated earlier this month; the guide for PR card applications was updated in September (I have not analyzed these sufficiently to identify the changes, let alone any substantive implications; nonetheless, it is clear that the gist of the RO credit for accompanying citizen spouse has not been significantly affected by the recent changes).
In regards to changes over the course of recent YEARS, however, it warrants further noting, with emphasis, that in regards to this particular RO credit, in the instructions, guides, and PDIs, IRCC has mostly dropped references to this being based on the PR and citizen living together, or ordinarily residing together, more and more just using the "
accompanying" term. And yeah, this is something of a cop out, since this term, "
accompanying," has NO clearly defined meaning for purposes of this RO credit, and indeed it has been defined differently by different officers, IAD panels, even Federal Court justices.
Most of which should NOT be much if at all relevant to your situation, again assuming you and your spouse were settled and living in Canada before moving abroad, and that notwithstanding a period of living apart (such as to accommodate relocation from one country to another), such that generally, overall, for most of the last five years you have in fact been living together. BUT you are correct to note, to bring up the potential for questions if there are other circumstances which could invite questions about just what periods of time are entitled to credit based on the PR
accompanying the citizen spouse.