Congratulations, you WILL DEFINITELY NOT BE ABLE to renew your PR card once it expires.
Even if you are allowed in the country, which I highly doubt because there is no way you'll be able to meet your obligations, you won't be able to renew your PR status.
I wouldn't even attempt to return, you'll just waste your time.
You have 2 options:
- Apply to have your case reviewed and provide a good reason for not having met your obligations (this can take time, years even) and unless you have a very good reason it won't help. Also, you won't be able to apply for any sort of visa or enter the country while it's being processed.
- Voluntarily renounce for PR status and start from scratch. Reapply for PR through Express Entry (or family sponsorship, etc)
It is what it is! Good luck!
The above post has so many errors and misleading statements it should not be ignored.
"Even if you are allowed in the country, which I highly doubt because there is no way you'll be able to meet your obligations . . ."
PRs have a statutory right to enter Canada. Even if Reported for failing to meet Residency Obligations and issued a Departure Order upon arrival at a PoE, the border officials MUST allow the PR to enter Canada. Departure Order is not immediately enforceable. If PR appeals, the Departure Order is not enforceable for at least as long as the appeal is pending, which can take a year or more.
For a new PR, someone who has been a PR fewer than five years, even if they are short of being in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation there is a fair chance of being allowed to enter Canada without being Reported for this. The sooner they actually arrive in Canada the better their chances. As others have observed, if the PR comes to Canada and is not Reported, the PR can stay two years and that will totally CURE the breach of the RO. They should not leave Canada during those two years and should not apply for a new PR card until after being in Canada two years.
"Even if you are allowed in the country . . . you won't be able to renew your PR status."
PR status does NOT expire. There is NO process for renewing PR status. It is unnecessary to renew PR status.
"You have 2 options:"
There are more than two ways to approach the situation. Yes, one of them is to renounce PR status and start from scratch. That is more or less a
last-ditch-effort. The other proffered "option" is not even in sight of a ballpark let alone being in the ballpark.
"Apply to have your case reviewed and provide a good reason for not having met your obligations (this can take time, years even) and unless you have a very good reason it won't help."
There is no application to "review" PR status itself.
If a PR is questioned about RO compliance and is issued the 44(1) Report for a breach, the PR will be given an opportunity then and there (usually) to explain his or her reasons for not coming to Canada sooner, AND get a decision right then and there, by the Minister's Delegate who reviews the Report and any H&C considerations. Even if the Minister's Delegate response is negative and a Departure Order is issued, the PR is still allowed to enter Canada and can appeal, and live in Canada pending the appeal.
"Also, you won't be able to apply for any sort of visa or enter the country while it's being processed."
A PR remains a PR pending an appeal. Even if the PR has lost his or her PR card, or the PR card has expired, and the PR makes an application for a PR Travel Document in order to travel to Canada, and that is denied, the PR can appeal that. During the appeal, either from a Report issued at the border or from a denied PR TD application, the PR is still a Canadian, still a Canadian PR. And a Canadian PR has a statutory right to enter Canada.
PR with a PR card should have no problem traveling to Canada. And will be allowed to enter. Once an appeal is in process, the PR can still travel and return to Canada using his or her PR card. If the PR card expires while the appeal is pending, the PR is eligible for a one-year PR card pending the appeal (PR must be in Canada to be eligible for the one-year card).