TMQ said:
I became a Canadian permanent resident in September 2011. At that time I was studying in a US university. I had continued to live/study in the US the past 3 years to complete my university education. Does this time studying in the US, count towards my 'basic residency', 1056 days, requirement? Meaning, can I apply for Canadian residency? I am 22 years.
Note: as a
practical matter, you can apply for citizenship but it is almost certain that you do not qualify and will not be granted citizenshp until you meet an actual physical presence test. It is not at all likely you will qualify until, at minimum, four years after the date you settle in Canada to live full-time. In other words, if you arrive in Canada the first week of January (just two weeks from now) to live full-time, you will not be ready to apply for citizenship until January
2019, plus however many days you spend outside Canada in the meantime.
Technically . . . Yes, you meet the basic residency requirement.
"Basic residency" is based on date of landing. Any PR who landed three years or more ago meets the
basic residency requirements and is
eligible to
apply for citizenship under the current version of Section 5(1), no matter how much time they have spent in Canada.
However, basic residency is NOT sufficient to be qualified for a grant of citizenship.
To be eligible under the current version of Section 5(1) means that the application cannot be summarily denied, but has to be processed. Again, all that is required for this, in terms of residency, is what CIC describes as "basic residency."
To be
qualified for the grant of citizenship, however, a PR must also be
"resident in Canada" at least three of the four years preceding the date of application. While this does not necessarily require 1095 days of actual presence during the relevant four years, it does require actually having residence in Canada for three years, otherwise having centralized one's life in Canada, and exceptions to the 1095 days (three years) of actual physical presence test are
few. In other words, generally the current law requires actual physical presence in Canada for 1095 days, with only a few, unusual exceptions to this.
You will
not come close enough to meeting the residency requirement (resident in Canada three years in four) in time for it to be worth applying based on the current version of section 5(1) of the
Citizenship Act. Thus, to become a citizen, you will have to apply under the amended version of 5(1) (which will take effect sometime in 2015), which means you will have to meet a strict actual physical presence requirement, with presence in Canada for four years out of the six years prior to applying, and at least 183 days in each of four calendar years during those six years. In other words, you are looking at 2019 as the soonest you will be able to realistically apply for a grant of citizenship.
CAUTION: As others have pointed out, if you have not been spending some time in Canada since landing as a PR, over the course of the last three years, you are running the risk of losing PR status due to a failure to meet the PR Residency Obligation, which requires presence in Canada for 730 days before the fifth year anniversary of the date you landed and became a PR.