torhout13 said:
Hello, I would like to ask regarding an expired PR. Do I need to apply for a PR Travel Document if I am from a visa exempt country? I meet residency requirements and I also applied for a PR renewal while in Canada but I am now outside of Canada.
From my understanding eTA is not mandatory until fall 2016.
Thank you.
Short answer:
My guess is probably; that is, that you probably will need to obtain a PR TD or travel via the U.S. to return to Canada.
I recognize some have a contrary opinion for PRs with a visa-exempt passport, at least for the near future before the eTA leniency period ends, with views ranging from those who think boarding will be allowed, by displaying the visa-exempt passport, to the view it is possible if the PR manages to avoid disclosing PR status.
IRCC advises that PRs must present a PR card or PR TD to board a flight to Canada.
Longer, more detailed explanation:
eTA does not directly affect a Canadian PR. Indeed, in particular, Canadian PRs are not subject to eTA requirements.
The information currently being provided by IRCC is posted at the top of the IRCC web page titled "Understand permanent resident status," which is the following web page:
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/newcomers/about-pr.asp
There is no mention of any leniency period for this.
There is similar information, essentially stating that to board a flight to Canada a Canadian PR must present either a valid PR card or a PR Travel document, posted in multiple IRCC web pages, including those with information for prospective visitors to Canada; for example, see
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/visit/apply-who.asp
This page contains the general eTA advisory at the top (it is after all a page addressed to prospective visitors), which generically refers to "travellers" who do not have an eTA being able to board flights during what is being referred to as a
leniency period, but also states that travelers must otherwise have appropriate travel documents. (For PRs, the appropriate travel documents for boarding a flight to Canada is the combination of a valid passport plus either a PR card or PR TD.)
Again, there are (probably) some participants in this forum who continue to believe that during the eTA leniency period those PRs without a valid PR card still may be allowed to board a flight to Canada if they present their visa-exempt passport.
I am not among those who believe this. My
guess is the contrary, that the PR rule is
now generally being enforced. I am quite sure, however, that at the least there is a substantial risk the PR rule will be enforced for any given PR, subject to the particular circumstances.
There have been NO recent reports, one way or the other, none since the mandate of the eTA regulation (
section 7.1(1) IRPA Regulations - this should link) took effect March 15, 2015.
It appears that airlines are not updating their information and to some extent continue to post conflicting information. Air Canada, for example, has a webpage
titled "Travel Documents" (this should link) which specifically states that PRs without a PR card "will not be allowed to board the carrier back to Canada." But in a drop-down window for "details" for international flights, linked from the same page, it states that only PRs "from non visa-waiver countries" need a PR card "to return to Canada." My impression is that this page has not been updated in some time.
How to approach this is of course a personal judgment subject to individual circumstances.