I am a Canadian PR and US Lawful Permanent Resident. I currently live in the US.
My PR card is expiring in Aug 2023 but I am sure I have maintained my Residency Obligation. I have travelled many times to Canada by land in the past few months and and been allowed entry and CBSA confirmed I met my RO.
I want to travel by Air to Canada in Oct 2023 to attend my Canadian citizenship oath ceremony.
I know that as an LPR, green card plus non-Canadian passport is accepted to board a commercial plane to Canada.
Source - https://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=1053
I also know that as a PR one must present one-self as a PR to CBSA when at immigration, and despite an expired PR card they will let you enter canada provided you meet Residency Obligations.
Considering the above, does anyone see any issues with me flying to Canada given my expired Canadian PR card?
I do not know if this has been covered in this thread which seems to have gone all over the place but I think has missed the point:
-to my knowledge, US permanent residents (non-citizens) who wish to board a plane to Canada need an ETA (electronic travel authorization) which has to be applied for online. [UPDATE: MISTAKEN INFORMATION, REQUIREMENTS CHANGED AFTERWARDS]
The Canadian ETA site will not issue an ETA to Canadian permanent residents (or Canadian citizens of course).
Note, I believe there are two steps, but have never had to apply for one - first, the applicant must attest that they are not a PR or citizen, and lying would be a bad idea; and second, I believe the system does actually check in system for matches against Canadian PRs.
I cannot 100% state, however, that there is no possibility the system will not issue an ETA (in error) to a Canadian PR.
Therefore: I would suggest you plan to return to Canada by flying to a site near border and crossing by foot or private vehicle. Your expired PR card will be sufficient for that ( may get asked why no valid PR card, just tell the truth - it expired).
Background: had friends of mixed us citizen/PR background visit and the one US PR had to get the ETA at last moment. But that person is not a Canadian PR so had no issues.
[editadd]: read the thread below - THIS REQUIREMENT FOR AN ETA WAS CHANGED SUBSEQUENT TO THE EXPERIENCE DESCRIBED ABOVE, IT SEEMS TO NO LONGER APPLY.
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