Thank u.but im.worry if when.I aplay to renw my pr.I give.missing or wrong information of travel history.so I dont know that it can.happen.im.thst time if the cic think bad about me ..so plz advise.what sould I do.do I need to wrtie wh
I concur with the following post:
You can get travel history from CBSA under ATIP, however, Canada does not register all exits. You will get entrance records. Herein is the problem because if CBSA had all entry and exits records then it would be relatively simple to calculate days spent in Canada. This is the reason they want some PR renewal applicants who are placed in secondary review to submit passport copies and to obtain Entry Exit records from countries that they have visited.
Here is the link to obtain travel history
https://atip-aiprp.apps.gc.ca/atip/welcome.do
Beyond that: How important the PR's travel history is will VARY CONSIDERABLY:
A PR who is currently IN CANADA and who has been settled in Canada, living predominantly in Canada for the past four or five or more years, and who has a paper trail of his or her life in Canada, has little reason to worry if he or she cannot provide precise dates for the travel history. Approximations should be acknowledged, but a PR who has spent 1500 plus days in Canada during the preceding five years will be OK . . . and should be OK even if just 1200 to 1300 in Canada. Especially if the PR has had regular employment in Canada over that period of time.
A PR who has not fully settled in Canada and who has spent less than half the time in Canada (less than 900 days) during the preceding five years, on the other hand, really needs to make a concerted effort to be as complete and accurate as possible in declaring travel history dates. And especially so if this PR is traveling abroad (even more so if abroad for any extended duration) now or after applying for a new PR card.
In between, other factors can affect how it will go, not the least of which of course is the extent to which the PR's accounting of travel dates is approximate or has omissions.
The PR who is
cutting-it-close but who is in Canada and can stay in Canada, may want to consider just staying in Canada longer, waiting to apply for a new PR card after building a solid history of being settled in Canada with documentation to corroborate this. A PR does not necessarily need a currently valid PR card, and particularly so if the PR is not traveling outside Canada.