Dear dpenabill, or whoever can answer:
Regarding the flight leaving Canada, what if the flight’s Schedule departure time was after midnight 1:30am, but I checked in, passed security & at the boarding gate before midnight? Which should be the day I left Canada? Before or after midnight?
I’m so concern about it because I had a few trips, say like 4-5 times taking this flight. I’m afraid if I make mistake for 4-5 trips the officer might think my application is not trustable and put me to non-routine process, even though I have more than enough buffer.
Thank you for answering
While I disagree with what appears to be the reasoning underlying the first comment by
@canuck_in_uk my conclusion is largely the same as hers or his. No need to worry. Which deserves repetition for emphasis:
NO NEED TO WORRY.
Of course I am NOT certain about some of the details.
This uncertainty particularly applies regarding your more recent post in which you reference a situation which illustrates potential vagaries in the facts and circumstances attendant the particular event:
One still consider leaving Canada BEFORE midnight even thought the Actual departure time of the flight is delayed until after midnight.
That is, where there is a SCHEDULED departure a day prior to the actual departure, regarding which there can be different scenarios, such as a delayed departure which simply means the plane is not loaded and does not take off until after midnight, versus, say, where there is in effect a later "rescheduled" departure time (typically involving delays that are hours long and the later departure time is displayed on the boards showing departures).
To be clear, there is a definitive difference between a flight which is scheduled to depart on a date specific AFTER MIDNIGHT, but soon enough after midnight that passengers have gone through all the pre-boarding procedures before midnight, that is, the previous day (in terms of calendar date), VERSUS a flight scheduled to depart before midnight but which is sitting on the tarmac after midnight waiting its turn to take off.
All of which, including why I disagree with what appears to be the underlying reasoning for the first comment posted by
@canuck_in_uk (no quibbles at all with the second comment), warrants some more in-depth observations. Which I will try to get to later (got some yard work to do before it gets too late).
That said, note that the post of mine you are quoting is nearly FOUR years old. A good deal has changed since then. And, as I may not have emphasized enough in that post, there is a HUGE difference between counting days to meet the physical presence requirement for citizenship, where falling short of the requirement by just one day means the citizenship application must necessarily be denied, VERSUS being within three or five days of meeting the PR Residency Obligation, which is not likely to be a problem unless there are other circumstances causing serious concerns. And, for purposes of making an application to renew or replace an expiring PR card, should NOT be a problem at all (as long as the PR is staying in Canada, and again UNLESS there are other circumstances causing serious concerns).
Also, the qualifying observations included in that post are worth considering. Especially: "
One or three instances of being one-day off is not likely to be a problem (IRCC realizes people make mistakes and is generally forgiving of small mistakes), but of course it is always best to be as accurate as possible."
As you can see, these observations alone have already gone rather long, without delving into caveats, qualifiers, or nuances at all.
I will make an effort to return later and elaborate more. For now, EVEN if the information CBSA accesses to verify your travel history dates deviates from yours by one day on, say, four occasions, that in itself will almost certainly
NOT be a problem for a PR card application.
And NOT a problem for a citizenship application either UNLESS the applicant applied with so small a margin over the minimum that deducting those days will render the applicant short of the requirement (IRCC has NO discretion to grant citizenship if the applicant was even one day short).
For a PR card application, even if deducting those days would render the PR short of technically meeting the Residency Obligation by a few days, that should NOT be a problem, again absent other reasons for there to be a problem. AND, in particular, not at all a problem so long as the PR is remaining in Canada.