Observations by
canuck_in_uk are correct.
Further explanation:
Cruiser81 said:
Hi Guys ,
My PR expires in Nov 2020 . I'm currently in Canada . My inquiry is if i spent 730 days in Canada and renewed my PR successfully , would it be till 2025 and the renewal requires another 730 days of residency in Canada in the period from 2020 till 2025 ?
Thanks in advance
Mahmoud
No. Not how it works.
As of the fifth year anniversary of the day a PR lands (expiration date on PR card is largely irrelevant), the PR Residency Obligation is based on the preceding five years, within which the obligation is be in Canada at least 730 days. Day to day, an ongoing obligation (some describe it as a "rolling" obligation).
Reminder: PR never expires. PR never needs renewing. PR cards expire. The expiration date on a PR card is not relevant to calculation of compliance with PR's Residency Obligation.
Alternative explanation:
Between the date a new PR lands and becomes a Permanent Resident, and the fifth year anniversary of that date, the PR is in compliance with the PR Residency Obligation so long as the PR has not been outside Canada for 1095 days or more.
As of the fifth year anniversary, compliance with the PR RO is always based on the five years preceding the day compliance is calculated.
Example:
Thus, for example, consider a PR who landed and became a PR on August 21, 2015:
-- as of August 21, 2020 compliance with the PR RO will be calculated by looking back five years
-- if this PR is going through a Canadian PoE, returning to Canada, September 19, 2020, the period during which the PR needs to have been in Canada for at least 730 days is the five years between September 19, 2015 and September 18, 2020
-- if this PR applies for a new PR card October 3, 2020, the PR RO will be based on days in Canada between October 3, 2015 and October 2, 2020 (expiration date of PR is
NOT relevant)
-- if this PR is traveling back to Canada April 8, 2021, and compliance with the PR RO is examined at the PoE, compliance will be based on days in Canada between April 8, 2016 and April 7, 2021 . . .
even if the PR has a brand new PR card valid until 2025.