Loulou79 said:
Hello,
I'll be eligible for citizenship on July 2nd. the signature date I put on the application is July 3rd. Can I send the application, lets say July 29th so it reaches Sydney on July 4th or 5th?
If you meet the physical presence requirements on July 2, sending in an application July 29 might be OK. But dated July 29 not July 3. Personally I lean toward allowing at least a little more of a margin than that.
I realize you meant sending it June 29. No, postdating the application is a really bad idea. Moreover, at least in the past, CIC (before the name changed to IRCC) kept the packaging the application arrived in, which generally shows the mailing or shipping date. Hint: probably a reason they do that. Since the applicant's signature verifies the information in the Physical Presence Calculation and the information in the application
as of the date it is signed, just being totally confident you
will be in Canada on a future date (even just days away) is not the same as verifying the fact that the information is accurate and complete as of that date (again, even if just days away).
I realize this is a common practice. But it is not a good idea in any formal documents for which there are serious penalties for making a false statement, including possible criminal prosecution. Read the affirmation in the signature box on the application form and take it very seriously. You can trust that the government of Canada does.
And the application arriving in Sydney a few days earlier is not going to make any difference in when the process is completed. A lot of the processing is done in batches anyway (especially scheduling for test, interview, and oath ceremonies), and thus depending on which local office handles the application, the group a particular applicant is processed with can cover applications made over a range of months not merely weeks let alone days.
In any event, applying with at least some margin over the minimum requirement is prudent. How much of a margin is a personal decision and for some it should be more than for others. But the current law is inflexible. So if there was anything that led IRCC to perceive the possibility,
the mere possibility your presence was just a few days off, that would lead to being denied citizenship. Cutting it real close can sometimes invite a total stranger bureaucrat to wonder if indeed the declaration is off by just a few days, and even if that gets resolved in the applicant's favour, it may result in some further assessment or inquiries delaying the processing. No good to save two or four weeks (let alone a few days) up front only to have that result in an additional four or six months of processing time, or even longer.
And remember:
-- it is not what you know but what you can prove
-- better to use a courier service which confirms delivery
By the way, postdated applications are deemed to be unsigned, thus not complete, and will be returned. See http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/tools/cit/admin/general/accept.asp
I realize you intend to time the mailing so that it will actually not arrive at Sydney until after the date it is signed, but again the packaging itself becomes part of the application file (many applicants get a photocopy of their packaging, including its shipping stamps et al, when they make the ATIP request for their file). Just plain not a good idea to postdate the application, for multiple reasons.