My friend got PR status last month (Sep 2021) and he is planning to go to India in December 2021 without a PR card. So, he is planning to apply for PRTD. But residence obligation says.
If you have been a permanent resident for less than five (5) years
- you must show that you will be able to meet the minimum of 730 days of physical presence in Canada within five (5) years of the date you became a permanent resident.
He has got PR status only 3 months ago. So, how can he show his presence for 730 days?
@YVR123 is correct.
As always, mostly the PR needs to completely and accurately provide the information requested and the visa office will appropriately make a status determination based on that information.
Up to the third year anniversary of the date of landing a PR is for sure in compliance with the RO because there are still enough days left on the calendar, until the fifth year anniversary of landing, to meet the Residency Obligation. So, for such a PR, just the date the individual became a PR will be enough for a visa officer to recognize and conclude the PR has valid status, is in compliance with the RO. No problem.
Still needs to provide the information requested, including travel history. But no need to worry that days in Canada so far do not add up to 730 or more.
There are various ways of looking at the RO during the first five years. One way is to recognize that unless the PR has been outside Canada for more than 1095 days, during the first five years, the PR is in compliance. Another approach is to recognize that a new PR essentially starts out with 1825 days credit, and then loses credit for days outside Canada.
Residence obligation is when you renew PR card. You don't need to meet this when applying for PRTD.
Take it from an old piece of
such-and-such it helps to slow down and do at least a little homework or at least gain some perspective before . . . well, no need to characterize the obvious.
Yes, of course, a PR needs to be in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation when applying for a PR card.
AND EVERY OTHER DAY AS WELL.
A PR can be examined as to RO compliance when engaging in any transaction with CBSA or IRCC that depends on the validity of the PR's status. So, yes, that includes when applying for a PR Travel Document (reminder: a PR outside Canada not in possession of a valid PR card is PRESUMED to NOT have valid status; this is rebuttable, of course, and is easily rebutted by just having a landing date less than three years prior to the application).
That includes when making an application to sponsor a family member.
That includes the examination conducted during a Port-of-Entry screening. Of course the vast majority of PRs traveling to and from Canada are well settled in Canada and ordinarily there is nothing of concern for border officials regarding the PR's status, so most PRs are waived through the border most of the time without being subject to RO compliance screening . . . but PRs may be questioned by border officials about RO compliance, and if determined to not be in compliance, issued a Report and Departure Order, a decision that terminates the PR's status unless it is successfully appealed.
So . . .
You need to proof to them you will be able to meet the requirements.
Perhaps you overlooked what the question was:
HOW can the PR do this?
As
@YVR123's response indicates, and as I reiterated above, and as it is stated maybe a couple hundred times in this forum, for the recently landed PR just the date of landing itself will suffice to show RO compliance.