Ownership, property tax, NOA, driver license, plate registration, bank statement, credit card statement, utility bill, cell phone bill? Every month with one of the document showing name and address is enough or not?
You could also include any health visit records...pay stubs...Ownership, property tax, NOA, driver license, plate registration, bank statement, credit card statement, utility bill, cell phone bill? Every month with one of the document showing name and address is enough or not?
How many days have you actually spent in Canada in the last 5 years?I didn't see doctor and was self employed. And I spent 6 month outside Canada evenly, every two to three months, back and forth. My family lived in Canada working and studying normally and we own a home in Canada. What's your suggestion?
Thanks. I have no this kind of document to support my stay in Canada. Can I use my wife and kid's record to support as they normally live in Canada? I was self employed and my major clients is not in Canada.How many days have you actually spent in Canada in the last 5 years?
You will need to show detailed entry and exit records backed up by passport stamps or other official records you can find relating to your travels and crossing the border. You'll need to show any evidence that you can to back up the days you claim you were in Canada. Having utility bills could help, but they don't actually prove that you were in Canada. I can rent an apartment and pay the utilities but never actually live there. Same with a cellphone, though you could perhaps use the call records to show that the phone was on the network during days that you were in Canada; but that still doesn't mean that you were (you could have given your phone to someone in Canada while you were away).
Have a read through this post: https://www.canadavisa.com/canada-immigration-discussion-board/threads/pr-card-expires-before-the-730-days-required.118357/page-16#post-5937151 by @dpenabill
You need to be able to make the case to IRCC that you were in Canada every day that you say you were.
But it's impossible to have no trace in Canada if you live here.Thanks. I have no this kind of document to support my stay in Canada. Can I use my wife and kid's record to support as they normally live in Canada? I was self employed and my major clients is not in Canada.
It's very sad that RO check turns to researching your everyday activity in Canada. And RO rules never say this. Even people without records of in-out cannot prove themselves in Canada everyday.
Yesterday, to my surprise, a ex-PR with all his family members Canadian living overseas lost his rights to even visit Canada, because he has to tight TIE with Canada to be a visitor, and too light TIE to be consider a reasonable real settlement to be a PR
So SR is not only for RO check. RO check is easier and quicker than SR?I believe I addressed this or a similar query previously.
No single type of documentation will suffice to prove presence in Canada.
For an applicant referred for Secondary Review, the scope of the examination typically is not focused on PR Residency Obligation compliance, but usually goes beyond that. In particular, few referred to SR appear to get requests for additional information and documentation. Some do, yes, but reports in this forum appear to indicate most face a long wait which suddenly ends, be that six months or a year or so later, and they are mailed a new PR card or notified to appear in person to pick up the PR card. (The latter will involve, at the least, what is called a "counter interview," which is not an extensive or thorough examination but there are questions aimed at verifying some information including as to compliance with the PR RO.)
If IRCC's concern is focused directly on compliance with the PR RO, rather than a referral for SR the applicant is sent a formal, more extensive residency questionnaire, a type of RQ specifically for PRs, or called in for an interview for the purpose of conducting a formal Residency Determination, or both. This is when the PR will need to submit proof of compliance with the PR RO, as in proof of days actually present in Canada.
Such a questionnaire has sometimes been sent to those referred to SR, so it can go that way. But if that happens, the PR gets the advantage of counting days in Canada in the meantime (at least in regards to a risk of losing status for breach of PR RO). And again, this does not appear to be the usual course.
For those sent the formal residency questionnaire: Proof of presence is largely rooted in proof of residency, but proof of residency (including address in Canada, tax filings, Canadian drivers license, membership in Canadian organizations, bank accounts in Canada, and such including evidence of immediate family residing in Canada) tends to be "passive" evidence and thus does not necessarily suffice. Best direct proof tends to be proof of employment involving being at a work site in Canada week in and week out.
BUT, if required (if issued the formal questionnaire) the applicant must provide a broad range of information and supporting documents, and all the information and evidence is weighed relatively, in context, each part in consideration of the other parts. The absence of documentation in one respect can raise questions overshadowing some of the proof provided. Gathering and submitting proof is NOT like collecting points.
Moreover, the PR's credibility looms as perhaps one of the most important factors. The same evidence submitted by one person may easily suffice, if IRCC perceives the PR to be a credible, reliable reporter of facts, BUT fail to be sufficient for another PR who IRCC approaches with skepticism over doubts about the PR's credibility.
It is in the latter regard that some gaps or omissions in the evidence can loom particularly large: if an IRCC processing agent gets the impression that the PR is evasive, such as not providing all relevant information, that can cause a real problem. It can be WAY more problematic to leave out information which is negative than to include the negative information.
In any event, what matters, IF REQUIRED to submit more proof than the documents to be included in the PR card application, is the WHOLE PICTURE, how all the information and evidence fit together. To rely on this or that particular documentation or evidence is a mistake . . . except, again, strong evidence of employment involving work at a particular location in Canada is good proof (unless IRCC has reason to be suspicious as to the accuracy of this information and documentation).
Any chance your wife is Canadian citizen?Thanks. I have no this kind of document to support my stay in Canada. Can I use my wife and kid's record to support as they normally live in Canada? I was self employed and my major clients is not in Canada.
It's very sad that RO check turns to researching your everyday activity in Canada. And RO rules never say this. Even people without records of in-out cannot prove themselves in Canada everyday.
Yesterday, to my surprise, a ex-PR with all his family members Canadian living overseas lost his rights to even visit Canada, because he has to tight TIE with Canada to be a visitor, and too light TIE to be consider a reasonable real settlement to be a PR
It is a little more complicated than that. AND, moreover, the SR process itself is largely behind the curtain, confidential, non-transparent.So SR is not only for RO check. RO check is easier and quicker than SR?