Thank you forw.jane.1. Yes
2. Yes
3. That may not work. You will need to submit English Test score.
1. Will let others chime in
1. Your current passport
Thank you forw.jane.1. Yes
2. Yes
3. That may not work. You will need to submit English Test score.
1. Will let others chime in
1. Your current passport
Since you’re still employed during mat leave, you can include that time in the employment period for that employerHello Everyone,
My spouse got his pr in 2019 and we are submitting our citizenship application.
I have couple of questions.
1. As my husband got in Pr in 2019 but the application ask for 5 year address history so is it okay to enter back home address?
2. For the tax year 2018, is it okay to check the tax filed not required and not submitted?
3. Is it okay to submit the high school marks heat as a proof of English language?
Related to my profile
1. I am currently on maternity leave. For employment history, do I mark myself unemployed or should say employed as I am going to rejoin my company once my leave is over?
Last question for both of our application
1. For the question where it is asking do you ever held a travel document?
Does this means canadian passport or it is referring to foreign country passport.
Thank you in advance.
Thank you kind sirYou don't need the visitors visas, these are dealt with in the physical presence calculator, only the places where you had an actual immigration status, like a citizenship, a work permit, studies...
If you want at least one person who had no problem NOT listing their visitor visas, that could be me. I listed my country of citizenship and another country where I went to university before coming to Canada, but didn't list the US visa in there, even though I obviously had one since I listed some vacations south of the border in my physical presence calculator, and got the citizenship in 5 months.
According to this, the visitor status does count. What doesn't is the period waiting for a refugee claim, or having legal issues (prison, parole...)1. Visitor doesn't count
2. Only Work permit will be allowed as temporary worker
3. Nope
My bad. You are right.According to this, the visitor status does count. What doesn't is the period waiting for a refugee claim, or having legal issues (prison, parole...)
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/publications-manuals/operational-bulletins-manuals/canadian-citizenship/grant/residence/calculate-physical-presence.html#s05
@onestranger the physical presence calculator makes the calculation for you. If you were in Canada on a given day, you put it there with the actual immigration status and you let the system do the rest.
The general wisdom is not rely on these days for your 1095 days to potentially make things smoother, by having a large enough buffer of days, but if you have actual proof that you were here on a given period (in case IRCC asks for additional documentation), you'll be good to go.
What's for sure is that you don't get to "decide" which days you include. You just input everything, with the change of status when you go from one to the other (visitor to temporary worker in your case), and let the system assess your eligibility.
Thank you! That is really helpful.According to this, the visitor status does count. What doesn't is the period waiting for a refugee claim, or having legal issues (prison, parole...)
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/corporate/publications-manuals/operational-bulletins-manuals/canadian-citizenship/grant/residence/calculate-physical-presence.html#s05
@onestranger the physical presence calculator makes the calculation for you. If you were in Canada on a given day, you put it there with the actual immigration status and you let the system do the rest.
The general wisdom is not rely on these days for your 1095 days to potentially make things smoother, by having a large enough buffer of days, but if you have actual proof that you were here on a given period (in case IRCC asks for additional documentation), you'll be good to go.
What's for sure is that you don't get to "decide" which days you include. You just input everything, with the change of status when you go from one to the other (visitor to temporary worker in your case), and let the system assess your eligibility.
Fantastic! Thank you so much for your help. This means I would be eligible to apply for citizenship now.@onestranger you actually put the periods where you're outside the country in the calculator, not the ones where you're in Canada. That would make the Dec 2019 to Feb 2021 as a single block there, and it's fine, both the visitor and worker visa count for half a day.
If I'm not mistaken, the status change in September 2020 will be listed in a specific question of the citizenship application, separate from the calculator itself.
Hey There,Q13: Do you currently, or have you ever held immigration or citizenship status in a country or territory other than Canada (this includes your country of birth)?
- The vast majority of us would have to answer 'Yes' to this question (unless you were stateless your whole life up until this point).
- This includes country of birth so don't forget that.
- Enter the country, status, date you obtained that status and if that status is current or expired.