Canuck78, thanks for your input. Much appreciated.
I read just above that it has to be 3 years of tax returns. Is it only applicable to OP situation.
So I can retain the 2 years as regards my specific case, is this correct?
The requirement is to COMPLY with CRA rules . . . to comply with tax filing obligations . . . for merely three of the five years years preceding the date of the application.
A year that the PR did not need to file a tax return, under CRA rules, counts as one of the three years toward meeting this requirement.
Some PRs may meet this requirement even if they have NEVER filed a tax return . . . so long as under CRA rules they were not obligated to file a return. (Note: this would be unusual, but very much possible.)
Thus, the following is simply wrong:
For citizenship you have to fille atleast 3 years tax returns in prevoius 5 years, there is no exception here. So you have to wait until u file 3 tax returns.
If u send a application with a 2 years tax returns your application will considered incomplete and returned to you.
That is not correct. Again, the requirement for grant citizenship is that the applicant must have met tax filing obligations for three of the preceding five tax years.
If the applicant can truthfully check "no," not required to file for a particular tax year, that will count toward one of the three even though the applicant checks "no" did not file a return for that year.
A person applying today, for example, can check "no" not required to file for 2019 because there is, so far, no obligation to file a 2019 tax return (no obligation to do so until after April 29). And this will count as one of those three tax years in which the applicant needs to have complied with the CRA tax filing rules.
Note, for example, some assert that being a resident of Canada means the person is obligated to file a tax return. NOT necessarily true. See the CRA website for specific criteria regarding who must file a tax return.
That said, MOST people who are a resident of Canada will benefit from filing a tax return even if technically they are not obligated to file a return. And there are a number of benefits, including benefits to family members, which will trigger the obligation to file.
So it is rather unusual for a person who is resident in Canada to check "no" and "no" . . . not required to file and did not file. Leading to a
CAUTION . . . .
CAUTION:
Meeting the tax filing obligations for grant citizenship is one of the easiest to meet eligibility requirements. As noted, if the applicant can honestly say that he or she was not required to file a tax return for this or that year, that will count as one of the three years. Anyone applying for citizenship in the first quarter of the new year automatically gets a pass for the previous tax year (applications made in the first quarter of 2020, again, can check "no" and "no" for 2019 and count 2019 as one of the three years they have complied with filing obligations, even though they will be obligated to file a return for 2019 by April 30, 2020).
BUT not filing a tax return for a year an individual was resident in Canada is UNUSUAL enough to invite if not outright raise questions. It could be a factor triggering RQ-related non-routine processing.
And, frankly, this could be a consideration for all the tax years . . . say you have already filed for 2019, and you filed for 2018 and 2017, that totally meets the requirement to have complied with tax filing obligations for three of the preceding five years. BUT if your presence calculation and address information in the application also indicates you were a resident in Canada for much of 2016, but did not file a return that year, no stretch of imagination necessary to suggest this could trigger questions.
The prudent applicant will have filed a tax return for ALL tax years in which there was an obligation to file a return, and this will ordinarily include filing a tax return for ALL tax years the PR was residing in Canada during the five year eligibility period. This is not necessary to meet the requirements. But just like having a decent margin of presence over the minimum, it can make the difference between a positive impression or inviting questions if not suspicions.