canuck_in_uk said:
??
A passport is most definitely required to enter Canada, except in a few exceptions such as Americans.
when i get to immigration, they only ask for the PR card, not my passport. perhaps this is because i'm traveling from the US. How I understand it, the passport is needed to TRAVEL to canada, but when you get to immigration they usually ask for
only the PR card to prove your eligibility to enter. or is this different when traveling from a country other than the US?
Here's what it says online:
https://travel.gc.ca/returning/customs/entering-canada
Required identification
Make sure you carry proper identification for yourself and any children travelling with you to help confirm your legal right to enter Canada. Canada has introduced a new entry requirement, known as an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA), for certain international travellers who fly to Canada. Read about the changes and how they may affect you.
Permanent residents
Permanent residents (immigrants living in Canada who are not yet Canadian citizens) need a valid permanent resident card to return to Canada. Check the expiry date on your card.
there is no mention of needing to show a passport at immigration, only the PR card. The PR card is the government issued document that proves a person's Canadian PR status. While a passport technically does this because of what electronic records it brings up for CBSA when scanned, the passport document presented by
itself doesn't prove PR status. The counterfoil on non-visa exempt passports show approval for travel, but i don't think it actually proves a person actually became a pr and has a valid PR card/status? The COPR stapled inside is proof of landing, but must be presented along side the passport (and most people don't travel with this when they have a PR card). so even though a passport is required to
travel to canada, it's not necessarily required to
enter canada at the immigration check point when a PR card is available. am i interpreting this information wrong?